Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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Charlotte Perkins Gilman published “The Yellow Wallpaper” in 1892 as a representation of how women and their roles were defined by society. This was a time in our nation’s history when social Darwinism was the norm, and women were beginning to push back against society’s role of women in relation to men. Society viewed women as property and both mentally and physically inferior to men, and women were thought to be chaotic, irrational, and intellectually inferior to men. Perkins Gilman viewed this repression as detrimental to a woman’s essence and their mental health. By writing “The Yellow Wallpaper,” Perkins Gilman wants to bring attention to the harm that this control could have on women and to raise awareness that every woman is capable …show more content…

Darwin concludes that “the chief distinction in the intellectual powers of the two sexes is shewn by man attaining to a higher eminence, in whatever he takes up, than woman can attain” (The Descent of Man). Also, Darwin publishes that “man is more courageous, pugnacious, and energetic than woman, and has a more inventive genius [and] his brain is absolutely larger” (The Descent of Man). These conclusions were embraced by Victorian society and helped to solidify the role of women as subservient to their husbands and men in general. Women were not recognized as equal partners in a marriage, and this is the evidenced between the narrator and John in “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Perkins Gilman creates the narrator’s husband, John, as a significant figure of repression in “The Yellow Wallpaper.” John is not only the husband, but a doctor who will have input in the narrator’s medical care. John embodies both the societal ideology that men rule over their wives, and the scientific representation of man’s superiority over woman. The narrator questions John about the house and how strange it is, and “John laughs at [the narrator]” and the narrator states that “one expects that” (Perkins Gilman 687). John is forever brushing aside the narrators’ feelings and symptoms because John does not …show more content…

This repression prevented women from expressing their inner self, and they were not free to fulfill their dreams and aspirations. Perkins Gilman represents this repression as the yellow color, which is described as “a smouldering unclean yellow … a sickly sulphur tint” (688). This repression did not show favoritism or racism; it was felt by every woman from every aspect of society. This repression invaded the home, the work environment, the social classes, and the government. No woman from any part of society was untouched by this repression, and Perkins Gilman represents this when she wrote about the “yellow smell” (694). She wrote that “it creeps all over the house … it gets into [the narrator’s] hair … hanging over [the narrator]” (694). The yellow smell proliferated throughout the entire house performing just as any gas or odor performs; it moved from room to room equally distributing its molecules which effectively demonstrated the reach of this repression on

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