Comparing The Yellow Wallpaper And The Black Cat

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In the Literary Eras of Romanticism and Realism, the theme of hysteria was written about in multitude, which is apparent in the two short stories “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Kate Chopin and “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allen Poe. These two short stories highlight the unnamed narrator's descent into being driven mad. The man and the woman were able to highlight insanity during this period in different ways. Kate Chopin’s goal in her writing of women was to highlight the stigma and lack of knowledge during this time of women’s health. This is why the narrator's reason for going insane is completely different, as the man finds alcohol to blame avoiding a real problem, and the woman was trapped against her will. But their partners similarly have large …show more content…

When the man’s anger finally capsized with the arrival of the second cat, his first intention was to kill the cat. Though this action was stopped by his wife leading to her death, his insanity reached the level of murder and feeling no remorse for his actions. In the poem, the man states, “This hideous murder accomplished, I set myself forthwith, and with entire deliberation, to the task of concealing the body” (Poe 11). The use of “accomplished” and “task of concealing the body” shows the man feels nothing for the actions he had just performed. His craziness had complete control over him whether he blamed the alcohol or something truly wrong with him. The man was completely consumed and his actions were detrimental to the people and animals around him. Though the woman from the Yellow Wallpaper did fall into hysteria, it did not consume her the way it did the man. She never hurt any living things, but when she finally was driven to the point where she could not stay in the room anymore, she began to rip the wallpaper off of the wall and lock John out of the room by throwing the key out the

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