Imprisoned Lives: A Deeper Look at 'The Yellow Wall-Paper'

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From reading Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wall-Paper various opinions can be made about the novella and what it is portrayed to represent. Perhaps the simplest opinion could be that John, the husband of the main character, was married to an insane wife. This interpretation would not be false at all, in fact, it is indeed true however, the deeper meaning of this text lies between words and emotions that you feel coming from the character that Charlotte Perkins Gilman had created. The character that allows you to see that deeper meaning would be the wife of the husband John. Through her writings in the story she portrays a woman who is held captive by not only a house and society but she is also held captive by her spouse. These things …show more content…

This could be because of the customs society has placed upon them and also how they are treated by their own spouses. This is explained in The Madwoman in the Attic when said, “Dramatizations of imprisonment and escape are so all-pervasive in the nineteenth-century literature by women that we believe they represent a uniquely female tradition in this period” (pg.85, Gilbert & Gubar). This is also relatable to John’s wife when she felt she resembled the woman in the wall-paper. This could be her using her artistic mind to ease her unpleasant time that she had to spend in that “haunted house”. Her writing was also a form of escape that she used to allow her sanity to be made whole. Writing possibly was not the only form of escape that women would use in the nineteenth-century. Practices of sports and other things could also be things that allowed women to feel relieved just as Charlotte Perkins Gilman character said she felt despite the fact that she knew that she was writing to no one. Which allows readers to think if women in the nineteenth-century where trying to escape what was imprisoning them? Of course women were not in shackles but were they free …show more content…

She constantly feels alone which most women probably felt at the time during that century. However, she also feels like no one is understanding her that is something that is also difficult of her to experience. She mentions, “John does not know how much I really suffer. He knows there is no reason to suffer, and that satisfies him. (pg.349, The Yellow Wall-Paper). The disconnection that she feels is created by the disconnection that she was preparing for since she was a child. Being raised and getting accustomed to the life that every woman had to tragically go through as a human being. Not having a voice, not having rights, and not being able to express

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