Women's Role In The Yellow Wallpaper

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There was a time about thirteen decades ago where society was in a much different state than it is today. While today women aren’t expected to have a specific role in society, that wasn’t always the case back in the Victorian era. In the 1800’s women were treated in a contemptuous manner and they were raised to believe that was normal. This leads to a story written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, called, “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Gilman illustrates a sick woman resting in what she believes is a secure estate, living with her husband, John. Jennie, John’s sister, and Mary, the nanny who takes care of the baby, are the only women in the house that are not sick. She is in the room, unable to leave, ends up disliking the wallpaper, thinking a woman is …show more content…

The woman has been isolated in the small room with bars at the window much like a person in prison, she is in her own prison mentally. She cannot speak out and leave to socialize with others because the man will get angry for her stepping out of her boundaries. This shows how men were in control and the women were belittled and had no authority around the home. In the house she was given the rest cure because she is “sick”, which could be caused by being too hysterical. As the woman was getting better she said to John, “Better in body perhaps” which demonstrates the tone she is beginning to have, she wants to feel better mentally. John replies with, “I beg of you , for my sake...you will never for one instant let that idea enter your mind! There is nothing so dangerous…[i]t is a false and foolish fancy” (652). John is displaying aggression because he does not want the woman to discover his true nature and he convinces it as crazy talk. Subconsciously, the girl is starting to realize her husband should let her leave because she is feeling better and won’t act up

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