The Yellow Wallpaper Literary Analysis

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Literary Analysis The yellow wallpaper written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a popular feminist and strong advocate for women’s rights; her acclaimed short story published in 1892, lets us inside the journal of a married woman with a new born baby; the woman’s name is never mentioned, which Charlotte later revealed in her autobiography, the narrator as herself. The story submerges the reader during a troubling time in her life; she starts the story describing that she and her family move to a new house for the summer, with the only purpose for her to get better of her nervousness, which is one of the major conflicts in the story. John, her husband, a really known doctor, assures her she is just nervous and prescribes her a resting cure which restricts her from any mental and physical activity; as the story unravels, she describes how she sees a woman …show more content…

The narrator admits she “disagrees with their ideas” (129), She believes that “congenial work, with excitement and change” (129) would help her feel better. In the story, she starts to admits that sometimes, she thinks that if she had “more society and stimulus…” and abruptly digresses and stops herself from finishing her sentence as if john knew what she is writing, she suddenly agrees that John often tells her the worst thing she can do is be thinking in her condition; this, is just another illustration of how even in her mind she is scared to break John’s rules by expressing her opinions. Barbara A. Suess in her article, the writings on the wall, remarks how in the story, it is evident the “unhealthy relationship between woman and medical language” (80). It is clear how there was not enough comprehension nor advancement on women’s health as it is

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