Analysis Of Charlotte Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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The Yellow Wallpaper, seems like such a simple title. Yet in reality there are so many other meanings behind it. Charlotte Gillman, the author of The Yellow Wallpaper was a real feminist. She is a writer, poet, and many other things. Gillman was born July 3, 1860 in Hartford, Connecticut. She was a born and raised American, and loved her country. She went through a lot of troubles in her life and eventually committed suicide after discovering she had cancer. Although the story portrays her as a little crazy, there are several reasons for her being this way. The Yellow Wallpaper can be very confusing, but is very true about how she felt in real life. During the story she goes through several stages of depression and as the story progresses so does the depression. This short story portrays a variety of themes, characters and symbolism.
One of the great, important themes is the importance of self-expression. Throughout the play the narrator is told to stay in her room, by her husband, to hide her depression from the world. She is forced to act like her marriage is perfect and that she is delighted, while in reality she is not. As the days pass she stares at this yellow wallpaper in this room …show more content…

At the beginning of this story, the narrator sees the wallpaper as ugly and dull. Then towards the middle a lot deeper meanings start to develop. She starts to see imaginative people in the wallpaper. These objects/people start to talk to her and make her think about her life. In the yellow wallpaper, she sees a striped pattern and to her it looks like a jail cell. With this, it reminds her of all the women stuck in second class not being able to speak up with their own voice. She believes that the wallpaper stands for something, holding women back from their life. Then at the end of the story, the wallpaper turns ugly and she has begun a since of insanity. She has begun to tear down the wallpaper and go

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