Discrimination In The Yellow Wallpaper By Charlotte Perkins Gilman

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The Way Out Discrimination is a common conception that is widely spread out due to the sad occurrence of gender segregation. Many have implemented similar frustrated feelings toward this subject in works of art and literature. Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the author behind the well-known short story The Yellow Wallpaper, faced similar problems of that of the main character in her short story. The narrator in the story finds herself in an uncomfortable state of problems. In The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman the narrator faces a physical conflict with her husband, and a mental conflict with The Wallpaper, but these conflicts eventually lead to a solution to the story. Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s, a prominent feminist, struggles …show more content…

The narrator finds herself stuck in a bedroom that she did not pick. In this bedroom there is yellow wallpaper and the narrator says about the wallpaper, “I have never seen a worst paper in my life,” (Gilman-Perkins 2). She also says, “Even when I go to ride, if I turn my head suddenly and surprise it—there is that smell!" (Gilman-Perkins 9). Clearly, the narrator does not find the wallpaper appealing when it comes down to sense like sight and aroma. She has a deep contempt for just the way the paper looks and it troubles her, setting her eyes upon it. The wallpaper also, disturbs her nasal sense. Something simple as odor from the wallpaper makes her unsteady and does not give her a positive reaction. Just at glance the speaker has conflict with the wallpaper but there is a further symbolic conflict she has that deals with the pattern of the wallpaper. For example she states, “One of those sprawling flamboyant patterns committing every artistic sin.” (Gilman-Perkins 1) The relator of the story strongly unsteady about the pattern of this wallpaper. At first glance, one might think the narrator simply does not like the pattern due to personal taste and interest, but it may also be that there is a deeper conflictive meaning in the pattern. A pattern is similar to a code and a code can have secret information stored inside of it. Metaphorically speaking, the wallpaper’s pattern represents the conflictive, restricting life the narrator finds herself in. Trapped in a pattern that resembles the struggle many women faced at that time, the discrimination and inequality they received from men. The narrator acknowledges that she was stuck in this figurative wall by saying, “I wonder if they all come out of the wallpaper as I did." (Gilman-Perkins). Surely, she alludes that she came out of that

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