Sunday, August 4, 2019
A Woman Indefinitely Plagued: The Truth Behind The Yellow Wallpaper
A Woman Indefinitely Plagued: The Truth Behind The Yellow Wallpaper In The Yellow Wallpaper, a young woman and her husband rent out a country house so the woman can get over her ââ¬Å"temporary nervous depression.â⬠She ends up staying in a large upstairs room, once used as a ââ¬Å"playroom and gymnasium, [â⬠¦] for the windows are barred for little children, and there are rings and things in the walls.â⬠A ââ¬Å"smoldering unclean yellowâ⬠wallpaper, ââ¬Å"strangely faded by the slow-turning sunlight,â⬠lines the walls, and ââ¬Å"the pattern lolls like a broken neck and two bulbous eyes [that] stare at you upside down.â⬠The husband, a doctor, uses S. Weir Michell's ââ¬Å"rest cureâ⬠to treat her of her sickness, and he directs her to live isolated in this strange room. The nameless woman tells the reader through diary entries that she feels a connection to the yellow wallpaper and fancies that an imprisoned woman shakes the pattern. The narratorââ¬â¢s insanity is finally apparent when she writes, ââ¬Å"The re are so many of those creeping women, and they creep so fast. I wonder if they all come out of that wall-paper as I did?â⬠When the story first came out in 1892, the critics saw The Yellow Wallpaper as a description of female insanity instead of a story that reveals societyââ¬â¢s values. A Boston physician wrote in The Transcript after reading the story that ââ¬Å"such a story ought not to be written [. . .] it was enough to drive anyone mad to read it,â⬠stating that any woman who would go against the grain of society might as well claim insanity. In the time period in which Gilman lived, ââ¬Å"the ideal woman was not only assigned a social role that locked her into her home, but she was also expected to like it, to be cheerful and gay, smiling and good humored.â⬠By expressing her need for independence, Gilman set herself apart from society. Through her creation of The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman wrote a personal testament of the emotional and psychological anguish of rejection from society as a free-thinking woman in the late nineteenth century. The life of Gilman revolved around troubled and loveless relationships that sparked the gothic tale of her descent into madness. Relating to Gilmanââ¬â¢s situation and appreciating The Yellow Wallpaper for how it exemplifies the womenââ¬â¢s lives of her time proves difficult today. Before the reform of womenââ¬â¢s rights, society summed the roles of the woman in a sim... ...ions far surpassed her time. The honesty of emotion in The Yellow Wallpaper sends a chill through any backbone, whether literal or metaphorical, and reveals how a simple testament can create a revolution of any type. From: . See 1. See 1. Lawell, Jeannine. ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaper: The Rest Cure as a Catalyst to Insanity.â⬠From . See 1. Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. ââ¬Å"Why I Wrote 'The Yellow Wallpaper'?â⬠The Forerunner. To Herland and Beyond: The Life and Work of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. New York: Penguin, 1990. Lane, Ann J. ââ¬Å"The Fictional World of Charlotte Perkins Gilman.â⬠The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. New York: Pantheon Books, 1980. ââ¬Å"The Cult of True Womanhood.â⬠Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe. Microsoft Inc, 2004. ââ¬Å"Charlotte Perkins Gilman.â⬠Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe. Microsoft Inc, 2004. See 7. See 7. Ceplair, Larry. ââ¬Å"The Early Years.â⬠Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Non-fiction Reader. New York: Columbia, 1991. ââ¬Å"Depression (Psychology).â⬠Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe. Microsoft Inc, 2004. ââ¬Å"Hysteria (Study and Treatment).â⬠Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe. Microsoft Inc, 2004. See 13. See 7. See 7. See 7. See 7. See 7. See 6. See 6. See 6. See 8.
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