The Walls That Confine Women: The Yellow Wallpaper

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Jayden Riddle Professor Archer Comp 2 7 April 2024 The Walls That Confine Women The Yellow Wallpaper is a short story written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman published in January of 1892. This short story illustrates the frustrating and unfair roles that women were expected to willingly conform to during this time. It is set up as the narrator’s journal, which she uses as an outlet to express her emotions that she is forced to stow away in the back of her mind. The narrator is deemed to be “nervously depressed” by her husband John, who is a high standing physician. John believed that there was nothing wrong with her and that all she needed was rest. He thought that the best” treatment” for her was to have no socialization outside of him and his …show more content…

Despite this, her feelings become more confused and her condition begins to worsen. She even states that she is “glad her condition is not serious” which is a reflection of her husband's words, despite this statement going against her own experiences and feelings. Though the wallpaper being particularly bothersome to the narrator due to its oddness and peeling condition, her husband again ignores her desire to have it replaced and says that doing so would just be enabling her nervous “fancies”. The narrator truly believes that her husband has her best interest at heart, but she keeps getting worse. She begins to dread the yellow wallpaper, and sees things take form in the pattern that she knows should not exist. She believes that there is a woman in the wallpaper, wandering around in the pattern and wanting to be free. The story ends with her husband finding her crawling around in the room with the wallpaper almost completely torn off the walls. He faints as she calmly states that she has been freed from the wallpaper, and continues to crawl over his unconscious form each time she makes a lap around the

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