Sunday, June 2, 2019

Effects of 19th Century Society’s View of Women on the Narrator of “The

Charlotte Perkins Gilmans short story The Yellow Wallpaper is a literary exaggeration of Gilmans personal battle with depression that exploits not only the flaws in the perception of depression in the late 1800s but the flaws in that societys views on women as well. Set up in a diary format, the entry document a three month stay at a mystic mansion where the narrators physician husband John, who has told friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with his wife, has brought her in on the sabbatical, of sorts, in hopes of treating her nervous depression (394, par.10). The diary format comes from the fact that the narrator is not openly allowed to write or work as part of her treatment. The ledger becomes her secret confidante and as well as a map of how her depression becomes a full blown psychosis. Having been instructed by her husband not to focus on her illness she sets her sights on the yellow cassie patterns committing every artistic sin on the wallpaper of t he converted attic/nursery that John has commandeered as their bedroom for the summer (395, par. 34). As the narrator forces herself into fortitude in the presents of her husband and his sister Jennie, her depression seem so transform into a state of paranoid hallucinations fueled by her obsession with the yellow wallpaper. in the long run the inward turmoil manifest its self in a very outward way and erupts into full on madness with the narrator accept she is the woman that she has seen in the wallpaper trying to escape. Having noted the slow decline of the narrator from imaginative and independent to submissive and secretive strikes a personal electric cord with me, as I to have suffered with depression in my personal life. I plan to identify... ...ge/ReferenceDetailsWindow?displayGroupName=Reference&disableHighlighting=false&prodId=SUIC&action=2&catId=&documentId=GALE%7CCX3470800268&userGroupName=lftla_pultch&jsid=ba2a9816fea4773bf2d1b3da34a59a1bTreichler, Paula A. Escaping the Sentence Diagnosis and confabulation in The Yellow Wallpaper. Tulsa Studies in Womens Literature, Vol. 3, No. 1/2, Feminist Issues in Literary Scholarship (Spring - Autumn, 1984), pp. 61-77. JSTOR. Pulaski Technical College Library, AR. 22 Nov. 2011. Wiedemann, Barbara. The Yellow Wallpaper. Short fabrication A Critical Companion. 1997. Literary Reference Center. EBSCOhost. Pulaski Technical College Library, AR. 22 Nov. 2011.

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