The Yellow Wallpaper Literary Analysis

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Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s narrative entitled “The Yellow Wallpaper” portrays a nameless wife who gradually descends into psychosis due to a prescribed treatment of the time known as the “rest cure.” Gilman’s work is an excellent example of feminine oppression so prominent in the late nineteenth century. Women of the period were considered the weaker sex. They were at the will of their husbands who made decisions concerning all aspects of life, including medical treatments, living arrangements and social activities. The intellectual stagnation and oppression of the narrator can be directly linked to her downward spiral into madness. The uses of literary elements in the story help demonstrate this theory.
One of the most prominent literary devices …show more content…

The major symbol of the piece is its title “The Yellow Wallpaper”. The wallpaper in the narrator’s room is a symbol of the oppression she felt from her husband and society. It is clear when the narrator says, “The faint figure behind seems to shake the pattern, just as if she wanted to get out” (Gilman 661). At the beginning of the story the wallpaper appears rather annoying but innocuous. As the story progresses, it becomes a central obsession and a symbol of the narrator’s imprisonment and madness. John, her husband, deprives the speaker of all intellectual stimulation. He treats her like a child throughout the story; “he took me in his arms and called me a blessed little goose” (Gilman 657). This statement is a prime example of his patronizing nature toward his wife. He does not believe she is really sick yet does not believe she can take care of herself. John cannot see the inherent worth of his wife’s intellect so he becomes dismissive of her desires. She begs her husband to go visiting. He refuses, saying, “I wasn’t able to go nor able to stand it after I got there” (Gilman 660). John’s …show more content…

These feelings seem to be indicative of the time period. In this case our “unnamed” narrator’s feelings deteriorate throughout the story as she becomes more out of touch with reality. In the first few lines the narrator describes the house as “a haunted house” (Gilman 655), musing there was something “queer” (Gilman 655) about it. The protagonist describes her surroundings as “quite alone, standing well back from the road, quite three miles from the village” (Gilman 656), this appears to be an indication of the loneliness and isolation she feels in her current situation. In the beginning she says, “I don’t like our room one bit. I wanted one downstairs…but John would not hear of it “ (Gilman 656). This small act of denial is significant in the outcome of the narrators’ mental health. The narrator is ensconced in a room upstairs formerly used as a nursery with the infamous yellow wallpaper. The imprisoning bars in the wallpaper mimic the actual physical metal bars on the nursery windows. The bars are mentioned throughout the story, reinforcing the idea that the narrator is imprisoned and needs to escape. She writes, “the windows are barred for little children” (Gilman 656). Outside the barred window the narrator see’s a garden with “a view of the bay and a private wharf…a beautiful shaded lane that runs down there from the house”

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