The Role Of Entrapment In Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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In the story, Yellow Wallpaper written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a man by the name of John moves into a colonial state mansion with his baby and his wife, whose name remained unknown. This was not just an ordinary family happily moving in together, although that is very much what it sounds like. In fact, John is a physician who, therefore, takes care of his loving wife which just so happens to suffer from a nervous condition that soon turns into a depression. Moving into this new house did not seem to help the woman's condition either, it indeed seemed to have worsened it. Johns wife mentions to him that this house was “a haunted house” and it was creepy. Little did she know her room was much more intense. Almost immediately after settling into the room, she notices the disgustingly yellow wallpaper stuck onto all of the walls, which gave her an uneasy feeling. This was the start of a very tragic turning point in her life. Physically and mentally, the main character's sanity and entrapment are now symboled by this yellow wallpaper. Something as simple as a yellow wallpaper is …show more content…

All because he never took her cries out for helps seriously and brainwashed her into thinking “she was getting better”. Not only does this yellow wallpaper portray a mental entrapment on the narrator, but it also plays as a physical entrapment on her too. Reason being because the yellow wallpaper locks her into this tiny room, blocking her out from all the life she is missing, which causes her to feel as if she is not improving in health. The woman also feels as if she cannot get any rest because her eyes are forever straining and focusing on each precise detail of the yellow wallpaper. She feels stuck and trapped and as if she cannot escape, hence the underlying symbols as the wallpaper being her own

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