Societal Repression In The Yellow Wallpaper

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“Life is a verb, not a noun,” Charlotte Perkins, author of “The Yellow Wallpaper” and feminist states (Davis). Life shouldn’t be thought of as just an object, it should be thought of as something you live in, something you control, but in “The Yellow Wallpaper” the narrator's life belongs to her husband, it is a noun to her. In Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the theme of societal repression of women is shown through symbolism displayed in the wallpaper, the room, and her writing. Prior to this quote the character is lying in bed with her husband,he is asleep, and she is obsessing over the way the wallpaper looks in the moonlight. The narrator begins to see the wall differently observing that,“The faint figure …show more content…

This quote proves the societal repression of women by using the figure in the wallpaper as a symbol of the main character, trying to escape the pattern of her daily life. She is beginning to see that what is making her depressed is having no control over her own life, she is trapped in the routine of being controlled by her husband. This quote is also an example of societal repression of women because she wants to get out of her life, get out of the room, and away from the wallpaper. The author included her change of view of the wallpaper at night in the moonlight as a way to show that when John isn’t paying attention she sees the flaws in him and her life, and realizes how much she would like to be free. She notices that there is someone trapped in the wallpaper and she later tries to help it escape, which symbolizes her escaping her pattern and encourages more women of her time to escape as well. The author used symbolism in order for the reader to understand how unhappy the women is with her role and expectations in her daily life. Prior to this quote, the narrator describes how the nursery is one of the less extravagant rooms in the house for …show more content…

When the narrator says: “It was nursery first and then playroom...for the windows are barred for little children…” she describes the way she is confined into a room just like a child would be (Gilman 648). In this quote the narrator explains how the room seems as if it was meant for youth instead of someone of her age.This quote demonstrates the societal repression of women when it states how both the playroom and the nursery were made for little children. The rooms symbolize how John put her needs under his own because she got stuck in the one room she disliked most. The bars on the window, the tears in the wallpaper and the bite marks on the leg of the bed, make it a question of whether the room was really a nursery, it seems like it may have been an insane asylum. She is trapped in a room that was made for insane people and she becomes insane as a result. This quote is also an example of the inferiority of women to men because John gets the nicer room and gets to leave the house while the narrator does not. The author included the symbolism of the rooms as a way to explain the women were viewed during this time period where women had less

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