Analysis Of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wall-Paper

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During the Nineteenth Century, the rise of the male supremacy and suppression of women was the topic of many literary debates and creative writings. During this time in history, many arguments emerged on the gender roles of society. Feminist theorists were on a literary high; women writers such as Mary Wollstonecraft, Sandra Gilbert, Susan Gubar, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman were writing on the oppression of women and the liberation that they were adamant on receiving. This spark for freedom in a patriarchal society drove Charlotte Perkins Gilman to write her infamous short story “The Yellow Wall-Paper.” In writing this story, Gilman depicts an oppressed woman taken from society, paralleled with her own biographical experience of mental repression. …show more content…

Critic Deborah L. Madsen also discusses this desire for the female autonomy through the women’s suffrage movement in the mid-nineteenth century. During this movement, women desired sociological and economic freedom: “The liberal emphasis on the individual stresses the importance of the individual and individual autonomy which are protected by guaranteed rights, economic justice and equality of opportunity (Madsen 35). Similar to Madsen, Ellen Carol DuBois states that though equality was the goal during the nineteenth century women’s suffrage movement, it drew upon much more than just suffrage: “ My hypothesis is that the significance of the woman suffrage movement rested precisely on the fact that it bypassed woman’s oppression within the family, or private sphere, and demanded instead her admission to citizenship, and through it admission to the public arena” (DuBois 31). There is a continual repetition of economic oppression and the patriarchy as being synonymous: “In Gilman’s view, capitalism and patriarchy work together in the economic and sexual exploitation of women. What Gilman called the ‘sexuo-economic relation’ is extensively analysed in Women and Economics (1898). Under capitalist patriarchy, ‘the economic relation is combined with the sex-relation’ and the consequence is women’s dependence and subordination (Madsen 41). Relieving women from this dependence on men through sexual and economic oppression are key to obtaining liberation from the misogyny of society. The suffrage movement, though important, was about much more than just the right to vote, it was about the attack on the patriarchal double standard. This socioeconomic instability among women paved the way for many upcoming feminist theorists and their rebuttals on the nineteenth century

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