A Woman Indefinitely Plagued: The Truth Behind The Yellow Wallpaper

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A Woman Indefinitely Plagued: The Truth Behind The Yellow Wallpaper
In The Yellow Wallpaper, a young woman and her husband rent out a country house so the woman can get over her “temporary nervous depression.” She ends up staying in a large upstairs room, once used as a “playroom and gymnasium, […] for the windows are barred for little children, and there are rings and things in the walls.” A “smoldering unclean yellow” wallpaper, “strangely faded by the slow-turning sunlight,” lines the walls, and “the pattern lolls like a broken neck and two bulbous eyes [that] stare at you upside down.” The husband, a doctor, uses S. Weir Michell's “rest cure” to treat her of her sickness, and he directs her to live isolated in this strange room. The nameless woman tells the reader through diary entries that she feels a connection to the yellow wallpaper and fancies that an imprisoned woman shakes the pattern. The narrator’s insanity is finally apparent when she writes, “There are so many of those creeping women, and they creep so fast. I wonder if they all come out of that wall-paper as I did?”
When the story first came out in 1892, the critics saw The Yellow Wallpaper as a description of female insanity instead of a story that reveals society’s values. A Boston physician wrote in The Transcript after reading the story that “such a story ought not to be written [. . .] it was enough to drive anyone mad to read it,” stating that any woman who would go against the grain of society might as well claim insanity. In the time period in which Gilman lived, “the ideal woman was not only assigned a social role that locked her into her home, but she was also expected to like it, to be cheerful and gay, smiling and good humored.” By expressing her need for independence, Gilman set herself apart from society. Through her creation of The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman wrote a personal testament of the emotional and psychological anguish of rejection from society as a free-thinking woman in the late nineteenth century.
The life of Gilman revolved around troubled and loveless relationships that sparked the gothic tale of her descent into madness. Relating to Gilman’s situation and appreciating The Yellow Wallpaper for how it exemplifies the women’s lives of her time proves difficult today. Before the reform of women’s rights, society summed the roles of the woman in a sim...

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...ions far surpassed her time. The honesty of emotion in The Yellow Wallpaper sends a chill through any backbone, whether literal or metaphorical, and reveals how a simple testament can create a revolution of any type.

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Lawell, Jeannine. “The Yellow Wallpaper: The Rest Cure as a Catalyst to Insanity.” From .
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Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. “Why I Wrote 'The Yellow Wallpaper'?” The Forerunner.
To Herland and Beyond: The Life and Work of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. New York: Penguin, 1990.
Lane, Ann J. “The Fictional World of Charlotte Perkins Gilman.” The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. New York: Pantheon Books, 1980.
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Ceplair, Larry. “The Early Years.” Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Non-fiction Reader. New York: Columbia, 1991.
“Depression (Psychology).” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe. Microsoft Inc, 2004.
“Hysteria (Study and Treatment).” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe. Microsoft Inc, 2004.
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