Gender Roles In Charlotte Woolf's The Yellow Wallpaper

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Only within the last century has women 's rights, suffrage, and equality become a important topic of politics, industries, and the common household. This in turn has led to a multitude of reforms in many nations for the benefit of women. Before this, there was a predetermined gender roles placed in society. The man was the master of the house while the woman took on the role of the housewife. Occasionally this led to the women feeling trapped in her marriage and feeling enslaved by society, and man’s view on them. In Charlotte Gilman 's short story The Yellow Wallpaper the narrator feels trapped in a relationship with her husband. Along the same lines, Virginia Woolf’s story What If Shakespeare Had Had A Sister also looks at the gender …show more content…

Gilman uses the women in the wall as a metaphor not for the narrator, but for all women who are trapped and imprisoned. The women is an alter-ego for all women imprisoned, but she is trapped metaphorically because the women themselves are trapped physically. The narrator writes in regard to seeing the women outside that “I can see her out of every one of my windows! It’s the same woman , I know, for she is always creeping, and most women do not creep by daylight.”(6) The creeping woman looks the same because she is the embodiment of freedom from imprisonment for all woman. The narrator refers to the creeping as humiliating because it is the personal desire of the women to creep as this would not be possible due to the tight control men in that century had in marriage. The narrator is not attempting to free a woman but her self from the marriage .Eventually, by the end of the story, is able to free herself at the cost of her won sanity. Deciding to creep over her husband is the showcase of her freedom and a symbol for her uprising from the grasp of her

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