The Yellow Wallpaper Essay

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Charlotte Perkins Gilman, author of the short story “The Yellow Wallpaper,” wrote this story with the intent of opening society’s eyes to the truth behind mental illnesses during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Although Gilman was considered to be “…the leading intellectual in the women’s movement during the first twenty years of the twentieth century” (Billy 1), she suffered from mental health problems for the majority of her life. Marital problems and opposing social opinions caused Gilman much grief through her lifetime. Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s life, and mental health struggles are clearly reflected in her short story “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Gilman includes many biographical parallels in her short story, “The Yellow …show more content…

This toxic combination prevented women from voicing their individual needs and assessing their means of treatment (Poirier 16). Physicians during this time were considered moral authoritative figures over their patients and assumed a duty to control every aspect of their patient’s lives. This duty was extreme in female patient’s cases. Weir Mitchell, one of the most well-respected psychiatrists at the time, was intelligent, but not exempt from being susceptible to societal beliefs. Mitchell whole-heartedly understood that a woman’s life revolved around her womb, and that a woman’s greatest achievement and responsibility in life would be the bearing and raising of a child (Poirier 19). Mitchell so firmly believed that God created women and their physiology for the sole purpose of reproducing to such a degree that he could not understand why some women did not experience success with his treatment (Poirier 22-23). This strong belief system prevented Dr. Mitchell from possessing an in-depth understanding of post-partum depression. If he did not understand and have a fondness for women, why would he agree to treat them? One influence that motivated Mitchell to treat patients, regardless of gender, was his own bouts with nervousness. Many aspects of his treatment came from his personal experience (Poirier 18). Perhaps this is why his treatment proved to successfully treat more men than women. “The Yellow Wallpaper” is successful in proving the unhealthy relationship between women and medical language (Suess

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