The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

759 Words2 Pages

Realism in literature refers to the depiction of events or ideas using pragmatic rules, and presenting those events or ideas in a realistic nature without embellishment or exaggeration. This style of literature was prominent in much of Europe and the United States during the 19th century. In this essay I will argue that American author Charlotte Perkins Gilman uses elements of realism in her semi-autobiographical short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” to shed light on the issue of women oppression during the late 19th century, thus becoming a paramount piece of American literature.

The influence of 19th Century realism and the truthful representation of American life are evident in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper.” While her story is largely symbolic in the way she uses the yellow wallpaper to represent the oppression of women, and her portrayal of the husband being immensely protective of her, in an effort to depict him as more of a father figure than a lover; the verisimilitude of the allegory remains constant from the beginning to the end. One of the ways Gilman does this is by writing in a diary like sequence. This forces the reader to focus on the “here and now” of the story, and creates an environment where one feels as if the sequence of events happening are in the present. Additionally, this sets the tone for the story creating a dialogue that is vernacular, complimenting the diary like writing and furthering the story’s authenticity.

Another technique used by Perkins to incorporate elements of realism into her work is to focusing on the characters of the story, rather than the plot. In “The Yellow Wallpaper” the narrator serves as the main protagonist of the story, while the wallpaper can be seen as the ...

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...its in that long smooch around the wall, so I cannot lose my way (685).

This quote is meaningful because it describes how the narrator’s delusions regarding the yellow wallpaper finally consume her and we as readers, can see that she has now become the wallpaper; moving and creeping alongside the wall as if she has just escaped for inside of it. It is only when the narrator finally becomes one with the women trapped inside of the wallpaper that she is able to see that other women are also forced to creep and harbor themselves behind the redundant patterns of their mundane lives. Perkins uses this pivotal moment in her story to help readers make the connection between the intricate patterns of the yellow wallpaper and the women trapped behind it, to the oppression of women, and her discontent with the domestic role women of that time period were expected to play.

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