The Yellow Wallpaper And Jane Eyre

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Have you ever read an old book or watched an old movie and thought: “why was it so hard for a woman to just live?”. Throughout history, literature has encapsulated society's oppressive ideals for women. Capturing the power of symbolism in addition to allusions, Charlotte Bront’s, “Jane Eyre”, and Perkin Gilman’s, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” these progressive writers highlight the injustice revolving around gender and class, along with portraying contrasting views on society. Bront employs symbolism to convey Jane’s journey of self-discovery through the novel. Throughout Jane’s life she felt as if she couldn’t fully be herself and lost her sense of individuality. Jane realizes she doesn’t have to follow every order,”I am no bird; and no net ensnares me; I am a free …show more content…

Women’s free will was overlooked by society and they were just expected to be molded by men into what they want. Jane had always thought valiantly and sometimes even acted on it, contradicting the timid nature that women were supposed to convey. This symbolism helps the reader understand her choices to leave Mr. Rochester and why it is so important that she did. This light that is shed on the dilution of women’s self-expression shows how society oppresses women. Additionally, Gilman utilizes symbolism to portray Jane's fanatical state of mind. Throughout the story, we see Jane slowly lose her sanity. Jane succumbs to the madness that being trapped in the room brings her, “You think you have mastered it, but just as you get well underway in following, it turns a back-somersault and there you are. It slaps you in the face, knocks you down, and tramples upon you. It is like a bad dream.” (Gilman 12). Jane has been trapped in her room, and it feels like a prison, so she has resorted to focusing on the lengthy description of the wallpaper that reflects Jane's view of

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