Women In Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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In the classic short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper” written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in 1892, a patient suffering from nervous depression is taken to a secluded home for treatment by her husband, a doctor. As the woman creates diary entries (in secret) throughout her stay, she develops a fixation of the repulsive, yellow, wallpaper in her rest room as she advances from nervous depression too delusions since her husband does not desire to take into consideration what she believes may help her regain mental health. In a male superior world, Gilman’s story describes how women were not regarded equal to men during the nineteenth century.
During the nineteenth century, women stood far less equal as well as opposites of men. This viewpoint meant …show more content…

Ultimately, she is forbidden to stimulate her mind or body, so she must laze around, not think nor take care of anything including her child.
Even though women began to work as well as educate themselves, they were still not viewed any differently by men besides their education must not hinder with their housework (Radek-Hall, 2017). Unfortunately, women remained the weaker sex and still to be in the domestic role along with being obedient to their husbands. Obedience, is voiced many times in Gilman’s story, “Personally, I believe that … excitement and change, would do me good. But what is one to do?” (Perkins 65). She is attempting to communicate her feelings to her husband, but his chauvinism does not admit him to consider her thoughts. Several feminist critics who have studied “The Yellow Wallpaper”, proclaim it to be an “exercise in gendered hermeneutics, align[ning] the inability of the husband to understand his wife’s condition”. (Thrailkill 526). Is it the inability to understand or he doesn’t want to understand? This is stereotypical o men that feel they are rational and women are emotional and susceptible to madness (Radek-Hall,

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