Compare And Contrast The Yellow Wallpaper And A Rose For Emily

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Analysis Final Essay
In almost every society women have been oppressed at some point. Although things gave gotten better on women oppression by men is still there. In American society today, women do not make as much as men in the workplace but feminists still seek to be equal to me in every way. “The Yellow Wallpaper”, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and “A Rose for Emily”, by William Faulkner, both give social critiques of the male dominated society that they are living in. While their critiques have both differences and similarities, “The Yellow Wallpaper”, not only gave this critique before “ A Rose for Emily”, but more effectively as well.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman successfully depicts a women’s downfall by the society that she lives in. …show more content…

John is a physician and is, “ practical to an extreme” (Gilman, 269). The husband does not think that the wife and narrator is sick and believes that she has a nervous depression. Instead of the wife deciding what is best for her the men in her life decide what she is going to be doing despite the fact that they believe nothing is wrong with her. These actions start her decent into madness. John starts her by cutting her off to the world and her writing. Writing was the one thing that really made her and connected to herself. He locks her in a room by herself all day and expects her to get well. Back in this time, the society had a thing called a “rest cure”, this cure was used on the narrator and other women in society that would be apparently have long-term negative effects on them. As she is locked away from her child she is treated as one. They put her in a nursery, which is the scene of the yellow wallpaper. Readers get the sense that the husband John did not know that this was going to have these effects on his wife but they are unaware because women are not that important in this society. As the narrator becomes increasingly more mad the audience begins to realize that the narrator is faulty. She no longer has the ability to connect with the

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