The Female Voice: Writing and Autonomy in Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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Writing in a figurative sense provides a voice for the suppressed that may be restricted. In order to project the voice of the writer, the writer uses imagery and language techniques in order to allude to a certain point or opinion that may be deemed controversial. This is shown within the Yellow Wall-Paper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, as it uses of these techniques to provide a more powerful voice for the female writer. The text follows Bahktin’s ideas of “discourse within the novel” as although it is diary form, it uses “internal stratification” as it voices three different opinions – John and Jennie’s disapproval, and the narrator’s urge for freedom. It provides a voice for the character that would have been considered as having a lower status. In my opinion, “The Yellow Wall-Paper” acts as a voice for feminism by warning the reader of the dangers of suppression of female expression. The continual restriction of her outlet of freedom through writing causes her case of insanity to grow, therefore the text raises the importance of the need for expression. The dark undertones of the text creates a gothic feel, this was noticed by many critics of the time who compared The Yellow Wall-Paper to works of Edgar Allen Poe, such as an anonymous critic from The Daily Oklahoman (Goldman 85) who viewed it as a gothic horror story. The story therefore could be seen as a way to scare men, warning them of the dangers if they suppress the voice of women. The text is trying to encourage female opinion to be represented, as it continually builds upon the idea of the narrator being unable to write, which is a key symbol of freedom, and therefore leads to her insanity.

From the beginning of “The Yellow Wall-Paper,” the narrator acknowledges...

... middle of paper ...

...h of the female voice is greatly ‘heard’ through the medium of writing and challenges typical views of a patriarchal society; and this in turn generates and ‘frees’ thought provoking ideas about the process of writing and issues within society.

Works Cited

Edelstein, Sari. “Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Yellow Newspaper.” The University of

Nebraska Press. 2007: Project Muse. Web. 12th Nov. 2011.

Hochman, Barbara. “The Reading Habit and ‘The Yellow Wallpaper.’” Duke University

Press. 2002: JStor. Web. 12th Nov. 2011.

Perkins Gilman, Charlotte., ed. Catherine J.Golden: Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow

Wall-Paper A Sourcebook and Critical Edition. New York: Routledge, 2004. Print.

Smith, Nicole. “The Yellow Wallpaper : Gilman's Technique in Portraying The Oppression of

Women.” Article Myriad. n.p., n.d. Web. 10th Dec. 2011.

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