What Is The Literary Analysis Of The Yellow Wallpaper

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“The Yellow Wallpaper” is a simple horror story about an evil, supernatural room, and the evidence for this is nowhere to be found. Charlotte Perkins Gilmans’ story is much more than a simple horror story about an evil room. Agreeing that it is a simple story would be a shallow analysis of Gilmans’ work. Like an iceberg, there is a much bigger, hidden meaning in “The Yellow Wallpaper”. The horror and supernatural room would only be the tip of the iceberg. It is, in fact, a complex story about the oppression of women, men’s standards of women, and how these two things can lead a woman to insanity. The story is about the narrator and her husband, who move into a new, but rather old, house for the summer. The narrators’ husbands believe she …show more content…

The way I see it is that the wallpaper is the way men, John, want women to be, or think women are. Nash Kevanyu summed up this idea very well, “The wallpaper is actually meant to represent a mould into which all women are supposed to fit” (Kevanyu, Nash). The narrator describing the wallpaper is actually her describing how she is supposed to be. According to Gilman, men want women to be “dull enough to confuse the eye in following, pronounced enough to constantly irritate and provoke study, and when you follow the lame uncertain curves for a little distance they . . . destroy themselves in unheard of contradictions”. Meaning men want women to be shallow, good-looking to an extent, and curvy but not smart. These standards that John wants his wife to live up too are what drive the narrator insane. Her constant studying of the wallpaper, is her trying to figure out what John wants her to be. As stated in the story, the wallpaper changes, does not follow any pattern, and is hard to follow. Johns’ standards are hard to follow, are always changing, and do not have a consistency to

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