Alice's Adventures In Wonderland And The Yellow Wallpaper

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Mental health entertains controversial perspectives regarding the treatment of, or even what, mental illness is. These views have, throughout history, often been portrayed in many written works that depict mental illness and the opinions of the time regarding it. Examples of overarching themes of mental illness, including the views of the decade in which they are written, vary by author and time period. This difference is evident in two works, specifically, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll and The Yellow Wallpaper by Charolotte Perkins Gilman. Lewis Carroll, personifies mental illness through the use of “mad” characters as well as demonstrates his main character’s descent into madness, reflecting the common view of mental health …show more content…

He (as it is stated in The Yellow Wallpaper), an acclaimed physician, attributes his wife, the main character’s illness to her hormones as a women; “You see he does not believe I am sick… If a physician of high standing... assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression - a slight hysterical tendency - what is one to do” (Gilman 1, 2)? This lack of care for a mental illness and it’s treatment highlights the absence of knowledge in relation to the care needed to retain good mental health. In an article by Sammi Messina on mental health in the 1890s, she explains the blatant lack of understanding that physicians and doctors, the main character’s husband for example, had regarding the treatment of mental illnesses. “ The continual degradation of the main character’s mental state...despite... best efforts as certified medical professionals to help her highlights the lack of understanding regarding...general treatment and understanding of the mentally ill in the 19th century” …show more content…

Kasey Deems, in a paper on 1890s mental health, states that majority of people in both decades considered the issue of mental illness fake or a kind of daydreaming. Both Carroll and Gilman’s use their main characters to reflect this sentiment by relating their delusions to dreaming of some kind. “You think you have mastered it, but just as you get well underway in following, it turns a back-somersault and there you are. It slaps you in the face, knocks you down, and tramples upon you. It is like a bad dream” (Gilman 7). “The dream-child moving through a land Of wonders wild and new… She felt that she was dozing off, and had just begun to dream that she was walking hand in hand with Dinah, and was saying to her very earnestly, “Now, Dinah, tell me the truth: did you ever eat a bat?” (Carroll 6-7). Gilman’s Jane Doe relates the wallpaper, the cause of her illness, to a dream like state forming a direct connection between the illness and a dream. Alice, described by Carroll in a poem in the beginning of his novel as a dream-child, causes the reader to interpret her actions later in the book as dream-like as well. By comparing their delusions both main characters are essentially classifying Wonderland and the Yellow Wallpaper as something from a dream (dream-like) and therefore the impression that any mental health related issues as fake, a common belief

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