Charlotte Brontë

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    Mental Marriage The short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper”, represents the relationship between the nineteenth century concept of marriage and the deterioration of the narrator’s mental health. Throughout the story, the narrator’s husband, John, continuously keeps tabs on her and controls the majority of her actions. The imbalance of power between John and herself was not uncommon for a nineteenth century marriage. According to the narrator, she and her husband John were “mere ordinary people”…

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    Gillam’s The Yellow Wallpaper and O’Conner’s A Good Man’s Hard to Find both imitate the horrific practice of dehumanization. After digging deep and analyzing the characters in each text the practice of dehumanization is uncovered. In The Yellow Wallpaper Gillman illustrates the husband/doctor prescribing treatment that treats his wife in a dehumanizing way. Likewise, O’Conner demonstrates dehumanization through the Grandmother and her use of titles in replacement of names. Throughout both The…

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    The Role of a Woman The short story “The Yellow Wallpaper”, written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is about a woman suffering from a temporary nervous depression as described by her physician husband, John, during the 19th century. After being diagnosed with this condition, the couple decides to stay in a mansion during the summer where the woman, who is also the narrator of the story, rests to be able to overcome her condition. Her husband constantly prohibits her from writing and isolates her…

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    In the short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, women’s systemic oppression in the 1800’s is revealed to her audience. In Gilman’s time, a girl was born into a world constructed to keep her out of certain spaces; a world that would consistently seek to control her and reduce her to a status far below the man beside her. A woman lived in a system of power hierarchies that sought to silence her. In her short story, Gilman spoke to an audience that would outlast her forever…

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    “The Yellow Wallpaper,” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is an intimate short story written in journal-style first person. The woman writes about her experiences and feelings in her temporary home for the next three months while her doctor-husband treats her for her “nervous condition”. As the story begins, she talks about her husband who wants her to rest and not to do any work or writing as a method to cure her condition. To distract her thoughts from her illness, she marvels at the beauty and…

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    Charlotte Perkins-Gilman’s short story ‘the Yellow Wallpaper is an excellent example of the toxic gender roles in the Victorian or Edwardian era. In the short story the gender roles of the society effects the relationship between the narrator and her husband, John. This can be seen through the way John treats the narrator throughout the story, how the narrator allows John to keep the power in the relationship and how in the end the narrator refers to herself as ‘free’ after the wallpaper drives…

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    depletion of the mental health of characters. Shakespeare has used mental health in many of his works such as Macbeth and King Lear and this use of mental health as a subject matter is one of the reasons why Shakespeare is renowned now. Arguably, one of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s most noteworthy works is The Yellow Wallpaper which is said to be the short story she wrote after she had post-partum depression. Both the playwright and the writer have elements of their work which show they had high…

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    The Yellow Wallpaper Real

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    wallpaper dealing her postpartum depression. In “The Yellow Wallpaper” Charlotte Perkins Gilman shows that we don’t like how freedom taken away from us especially, when you are dealing with depression. Along with the narrator dealing as if her feminism is stripped from her. Over a hundred years ago medication wasn’t available to treat depression like there is now so best thing for the narrator was to write and escape to a reality. Charlotte Perkins Gilman is an author and poet who was born on…

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    For some, being alone invokes this feeling deep down of something not being right. You feel fidgety, you want someone next to you, you need social interaction. In Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper readers and or viewers feel that same feeling. The character trapped inside the nursery and her mind can’t sit still. Put on bed rest by doctor’s orders and barred to the nursery inside their rental home, Gilman’s character is forced to contend with this unsettling reality, no mental…

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    escape from the misogynistic fetters that restrain their true identity. What exactly does a free, independent woman look like and most importantly, how is she able to achieve that freedom from male supremacy? Even famous feminist authors such as Charlotte Perkins Gilman in her short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” and Kate Chopin in “The Story of an Hour” seem to disagree in how a woman can break free from misogyny. The premise of Gilman’s story is that…

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