Depression In The Yellow Wallpaper

930 Words2 Pages

The Yellow Wallpaper was written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in 1982. The time period it was written in contributes to the overall theme of the short story as it is a socio-political metaphor on the treatment of women during the late 19th century. The main character as well as narrator is a young upper middle class woman who is presumably named Jane (her name is never outwardly mentioned). She is suffering from what today might be diagnosed as some form of depression or other (some sources have speculated that she is suffering from postpartum depression since she has a new child she longs to care for). However, during the time period, women suffering from mental illness were often cast off as hysterical or simply nervous, as her husband, …show more content…

They were always under the control of their fathers and then later their husbands. They would had no public access to their own emotions as is brought out in The Yellow Wallpaper. “Jane” was unable to accept the depression for what it was, she was even denied access to her own child, making her feel even more burdensome. “And yet, I cannot be with him, it makes me so nervous.” (The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume 2, 1865 to the Present, Page 488). She is sent to a summer house of sorts, forced to better herself from her “nervousness.” Idle in a room with wallpaper she cannot stand to see, she eventually succumbs to madness; resulting in her “freedom” as the woman trapped in both the wallpaper and her life. In this state of insanity she yells at her husband, “I got out at last,” said I, “in spite of you and Jane! And I 've pulled off most of the paper, so you can 't put me back!” (The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume 2, 1865 to the Present, Page 497) Both the reader and John, her husband are left in shock, as this was an unexpected turn of events. Nevertheless, Jane was free, insane, but free. The reader is left with only that, so one might never know what happened to Jane after her husband regained

Open Document