Mental Illness and Feminism in The Yellow Wall-Paper

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Poor Interior Design Fuels Revolutions
(Or Drives You Insane in the Process) Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the author of the short story The Yellow Wall-Paper, wrote a story with a focus on mental illness; while doing so she began a feminist revolution in the late 19th century. The narrator, Jane, is attempting to break free from society’s patriarchal ideals and begins to carve a path for women of the future. While the narrator of the story may not have fully escaped, her efforts mark an act of martyrdom for women’s rights and freedom during this era.
Gilman links Jane’s martyrdom to feminism through her use of metaphors. She chooses metaphors that exemplify the sacrifices and choices Jane had to make. Jane speaks of going on a boat; water symbolizes immorality and ground that lacks a proper foundation. Jane was willing to sacrifice what she believed in to help the feminist cause. Later in the story, she tries to bite off …show more content…

“But here I can creep smoothly…that long smooch around the wall, so I cannot lose my way.” Jane had the backing and support of other feminists whom may have created that smooch for her, Kate Chopin’s feminist novel, The Awakening had come out around the same time The Yellow Wallpaper was published. Mary Wollstonecraft’s feminist work had come out a century earlier, creating a smooch for these writers to follow. Thus, Jane left her smooches all around, for other women to pick up on and continue her movement.
This begs the question: did Jane achieve equality? The answer, of course, is no. It took two decades after the publication of Gilman’s story for women to gain voting rights. Jane’s actions did not achieve freedom, but her acts were acts of martyrdom. Jane’s decent into madness set a tone of suppression and subservience to men. Jane’s attempt to free all woman was not for naught, as time goes on women all across the country will follow Jane’s smooches and campaign for women’s

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