The Yellow Wallpaper Feminist Analysis

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The Yellow Wallpapers different occurrences show how society was a run down for woman in the 1900’s. Since the author tries to express herself as this young character from this story, she seems like she needs help as how men treat woman and how she views into society. Every scene in the story are ways she tried to state the problems of how or what it would be to see under her own point of view. Mainly, she is trying to find herself as many obstacles are blocking her from being a woman of society. (Even though the narrator tries to find her perspective of life inside this “wallpaper”, she First of all, Gilman’s perspective, as John’s wife, appeared different than John. Her claim of a woman on the wallpaper was just an image of a true woman …show more content…

From the beginning of how she saw the house and how it was inside made it clearly that it wasn’t as it was described. All these representations completed of how she viewed society of the 1900’s and how these specific things were affecting her life. All of these factors came into place to help out the reader and view the author of what the real outcomes were throughout the story. Even though the author did have those times where she had a real problem as John’s husband, she tried hard enough to fix the main problem as though she couldn’t keep that insanity of handling the truth and interpreting many of the different options of how she tried to keep everything under control though constant material and though the fact of despair of how she was treated. Overall, she had several casualties through the stories. She needed to figure out the wallpaper and how it was related to her, and how she wouldn’t pay attention to it till the end of the story, making the plot worsen as she didn’t feel right though the beginning of the story and keeping that insanity of herself keep the overall story deepen as she knew she was crazy from the beginning, but couldn’t really understand of how she tried to increase that compassion of how every little thing that she experience got her to see the view in a different way. Concluding, she was never sane, her mentality was not in the way as she was clearly seen in the

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