Back in the 19th century both women and men had very different and specific gender roles in a marriage. Men were seen as the strong, rational, and powerful individuals and women, on the other hand, were the weaker, logical, and passive ones. Men ended up making the final decisions about everything that goes on in the household and their marriage. Women were basically required to go along with anything their husbands’ had decided because they simply had no say so. Living in this form could have multiple outcomes, some being, resulting in the marriage going down an unhealthy pathway. It could even force the women to do or feel things they’ve never felt before. The way Jane and John of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” demonstrated …show more content…
But if things could have been a little different, such as having the females input incorporated, lives could have been so much better. Jane was the one who understood the problem she was facing and although she didn’t have a degree as a physician, only she could have known the proper treatment for her own depression. But of course, since her husband was the professional and he ruled the household, he demanded that her only problem was that she shouldn’t be exposed to the outside any longer. All she needed was rest in his eyes and that’s what he forced her to partaken in. After Jane received her husband’s discouraging and professional opinion, she thought to herself that “Personally, I believe that congenial work, with excitement and change, would do me good” (377). This meant that Jane’s depression was being caused by not having those things she wished for in her life. She was living in a predictable and boring setting and only longed for something different to take place, something exciting to do would have fulfilled that void. But little did she know, by actually following her husband’s advice only led her into a deeper and more psychotic …show more content…
All because of John’s decision for his wife’s cure, she was forced to live a life that only made her feel worse each and every day. We knew in the story that Jane was getting horrible when she began to place her life and herself into a wallpaper she viewed daily. Each time she looked at it, things got worse and she slowly started imagining herself being a part of this simple wallpaper. She envisioned someone trying to escape from a place, specifically a woman, and she just couldn’t get out. The woman is constantly stooping and creeping around trying to find ways to release herself. Then once Jane couldn’t bear to stare at the image of herself anymore, her sudden outbreak occurred. Jane was locked in her room tearing at a blank wallpaper she thought had more meaning than it really did. After her husband entered her room and asked what was going on, she was left with saying “I’ve got out at last” (387). At that point, we realized that Jane was struggling inside so much that her depression took over her mind and body and created visions that represented exactly how she felt. And once she scratched up most bits of this wallpaper, she thought to herself that she was free now. Free from being trapped in this life she was forced to
Throughout the nineteenth century, women were considered as the woman of the house. With this title, women were expected to take care of the children, clean the house, and complete chores around the house. Women were not allowed to have jobs and do what they wanted to. Most writers during this time period were men. One of the most famous female authors during the nineteenth century was Charlotte Gilman. Her most famous and controversial short story was “The Yellow Wall-paper”. Charlotte Gilman wrote this short story to change the view on the roles of women in the nineteenth century by using the wallpaper as the oppression of society and the narrator as women mentally breaking away from their roles during this time period.
After a long struggle to have some rights, women were not given the right to vote until 1920. For many centuries women have been controlled by men by being told what they can and cannot do. The story “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is considered a feminist piece through the narrators husband’s words and actions, the environment she stayed in, and the narrator’s own words.
“The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is a short story that demonstrates a woman being controlled and isolated by her husband who plays both her husband and doctor as she suffers from a mental illness. The core of “The Yellow Wallpaper” is when the protagonist, a woman controlled by her husband and doctor, John, leads to an obsession of a woman being trapped in yellow wallpaper finally takes control over her and John . John is incapable to separate his doctor role and husband role because of the traditional gender roles during the nineteenth century that leads his wife, Jane, to have the need to escape from her traditional gender role.
The yellow wallpaper referenced in the title of the story holds significant symbolic meaning relating to the oppression of the narrator and the progression of her psychological deterioration. Early on, the narrator expresses her disdain for the yellow paper covering the walls of her temporary bedroom, referring to it as “that horrid paper,” and declaring it the worst wallpaper she had ever seen in her life (Gilman 77, 79). The frequently mentioned pattern of the wallpaper, which is particularly exasperating to the narrator, symbolizes the societal patterns of gender-related restrictions. “It is […] pronounced enough to constantly irritate and provoke study, and when you follow the lame uncertain curves for a little distance they suddenly commit
In Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story "The Yellow Wallpaper," the reader is treated to an intimate portrait of developing insanity. At the same time, the story's first person narrator provides insight into the social attitudes of the story's late Victorian time period. The story sets up a sense of gradually increasing distrust between the narrator and her husband, John, a doctor, which suggests that gender roles were strictly defined; however, as the story is just one representation of the time period, the examination of other sources is necessary to better understand the nature of American attitudes in the late 1800s. Specifically, this essay will analyze the representation of women's roles in "The Yellow Wallpaper" alongside two other texts produced during this time period, in the effort to discover whether Gilman's depiction of women accurately reflects the society that produced it.
Women have always struggled to gain attention from men as well as equality with them. Charlotte Perkins Gilman 's "The Yellow Wallpaper" has a theme of feminine oppression. It is a work of literature that shows many of us how women were treated because women in the era in which this story was published were treated in much the same way as the narrator was on a daily basis. Male dictatorship over women is rampant within the illness and treatment of Jane the characters in the story, and the many symbols that serve to confine the main character. A stand had to be made in order for women to achieve equality with men. Standing up to a man, however, was not permissible in nineteenth century America. This story epitomizes
Jane is diagnosed with “.temporary nervous depression [and] a slight hysterical tendency.” (Gilman 648). Although she realizes there is more to her illness than temporary nervousness, her husband time after time ignores her wishes, claiming to know best for her. John shoves her in an isolated environment with little to no mental activity; this drives Jane to project her emotions onto the room with special attention to the yellow wallpaper.
a while in spite of them; but it does exhaust me a good deal-" (p801) It
"The Yellow Wallpaper" tells the story of a woman living in the nineteenth century who suffers from postpartum depression. The true meaning implicit in Charlotte's story goes beyond a simple psychological speculation. The story consists of a series of cleverly constructed short paragraphs, in which the author illustrates, through the unnamed protagonist's experiences, the possible outcome of women's acceptance of men's supposed intellectual superiority. The rigid social norms of the nineteenth century, characterized by oppression and discrimination against women, are supposedly among the causes of the protagonist's depression. However, it is her husband's tyrannical attitude what ultimately worsened her emotional problems to the point of insanity.
Prior to the early twentieth century men dictated women’s role in society. Charlotte Gilman uses her novella “The Yellow Wallpaper” (1892) as a symbolic reflection of oppression of women in a paternalistic society. Her novella challenges the idea of women being depicted as weak and fragile.
Can a story contain more than one antagonist? In “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman there is an overwhelming amount of conflict the unnamed narrator must endure. The protagonist of “The Yellow Wallpaper” is the narrator who is suffering from depression and is taken to a house for the summer to rest. In “The Yellow Wallpaper”, the wallpaper is the antagonist because it causes the narrator to have a breakdown at the end of the short story; John, the narrator’s husband, cannot be the antagonist because he is doing what he believes is best for her, and the narrator cannot be the antagonist because she wants to improve her mental state.
The Yellow Wallpaper, Written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is comprised as an assortment of journal entries written in first person, by a woman who has been confined to a room by her physician husband who he believes suffers a temporary nervous depression, when she is actually suffering from postpartum depression. He prescribes her a “rest cure”. The woman remains anonymous throughout the story. She becomes obsessed with the yellow wallpaper that surrounds her in the room, and engages in some outrageous imaginations towards the wallpaper. Gilman’s story depicts women’s struggle of independence and individuality at the rise of feminism, as well as a reflection of her own life and experiences.
Immediately, in the story Charlotte Perkins Gilman makes a statement regarding the patriarchal society. “John laughs at me, of course, but one expects that in marriage” (75). So very early we notice the outlook the woman has on herself. As they arrive at the mansion, the purpose starts to unravel slowly. As John takes her to the “room” with the yellow wallpaper, we realize this is more of a trap rather than a getaway. We find out she is “sick” because her husband and brother, who are high standing physicians tell her so. The woman says that the she is forbidden to work yet right after that she states, “Personally, I disagree with their ideas. Personally, I believe that congenial work, with excitement and change, would do me no good” (76). Therefore, this shows that the woman has opinions and thinks there are better ways to cope with her “sickness” but yet she just accepts what her husband tells her and does not ask questions. So, I believe this a good example of how the patriarchal society has affected the woman and how she simply lives her everyday life. As the woman becomes more and more attached to the wallpaper in her room, “the wallpaper elicits from her voluntary compliance with her husband’s prescriptions” (Neely para 3). He then opposes her writing, refuses to let her see friends, and eventually refuses all communication with her
The Yellow Paper is a short story published in 1892, and written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Charlotte tells of a disheartening tale of a woman who struggles to free herself from postpartum depression. The Yellow Paper gives an account of an emotionally and intellectual deteriorated woman struggles to break free from a mental prison her husband had put her into, in order to find peace. The woman lived in a male dominated society and wanted indictment from it as she had been driven crazy, because of the Victorian “rest-cure” (Gilman 45). Her husband decided to force her to have a strict bed rest by separating her from her only child. He took her to recuperate in an isolated country estate all alone. The bed rest her husband forced into made her mental state develop from bad to worst. The Yellow Paper is a story that warns the readers about the consequences of fixed gender roles in a male-dominated world. In The Yellow Paper, a woman’s role was to be a dutiful wife and she should not question her husband’s authority and even whereabouts. Whereas, a man’s role was to be a husband, main decision maker, rational thinker and his authority was not to be questioned by the wife.
Within the rather disturbing short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper”, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Gilman expresses an underlying tone of women’s suppression. The narrator lived life as normal, under the domestic ideology. Without the realization of what was occurring to women in that era. Throughout the story, the narrator began to realize the social norm was suppressing women and their “voice”. She began to act different from what society view on ideal females. The narrator found the source and reasoning to why the people in her household and other acquaintances acted in such a manner. After putting the puzzle pieces together, she came to accept the reality. During the 1800s, African Americans were given the right to vote in which it essentially