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    The narrator in “The Yellow Wallpaper” slowly sinks into insanity as she narrates, allowing the readers to go along for the ride into madness and cultivate a certain amount of sympathy for her and her plight as they read along. At every point, she is faced with relationships, objects, and situations that seem ordinary and normal, but that are actually quite strange and even oppressive. As the narrator obsesses more and more over the wallpaper she starts connecting it to her current life…

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    Yellow Wallpaper Setting

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    Setting is always an important part of any story but in The Yellow Wallpaper, the setting has an important impact on the reader. It parallels the way the narrator feels throughout the story, the isolation and restriction from social life. To exaggerate on this concept, the main setting throughout the story is the house. The outside and the inside of the house are exaggerated immensely, along with the current time period the short story is set in, and also the nursery that the narrator is…

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    While certain symptoms of illness are less often overlooked, this is not always the case. An almost tragic example of this is portrayed by Charlotte Perkins in her story “The Yellow Wallpaper.” This eye-opening short story utilizes irony to present the narrator’s delusional state of mind, where as her husband, amongst the other characters, does not realize the fate of the narrator after her misdiagnosis. The issue that is more surprising than the depression and insanity seen in this story are…

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    “The Yellow Wallpaper” is an important story, but digging has to be done to see so. The author Charlotte Perkins displays a feminist interpretation in an impressive way. Her use of metaphors brings out the true meaning behind this story. The wallpaper represents the way women are treated in our society, and the author tells a story of a “madwoman” to represent this overall theme. The house is the whole backbone to the story and is a one of the metaphors used. The house is where the yellow…

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    The narrator in “The Yellow Wallpaper” takes the reader along the ride through her own personal downfall. The narrator loses her sanity, when her husband refuses to believe she is sick mentally not physically. The narrator’s view of the color, physical characteristics, and her imprisonment leads her to insanity. The narrators first notices the color of the wallpaper and finds it “repellant and almost revolting” The color grabs the narrator’s attention, when John loses his attention towards her…

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    Angola and Yellow Fever The continent of Africa is a diverse place. Many cultures, languages, and ethnicities are sporadically spread throughout its landscapes, but regardless of the diversity of Africa there are several commonalities that make the continent of Africa prone to certain problems. One of these problems has been made manifest in nation of Angola as it struggles with an outbreak of yellow fever. Many physical and cultural aspects of Africa’s geography make it prone to these types of…

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    Yellow fever is a viral disease that has caused large epidemics in Africa and the Americas. Thirty-three countries, with a combined population of 508 million, are at risk in Africa. It can be recognized from historic texts stretching back 400 years. The infection causes a wide spectrum of disease, from mild symptoms to severe illness and death. Over the last two decades, there has been an increase in yellow fever and it is now a serious public health issue again. There is two classifications…

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    house. He chose yellow wallpaper for her. He also prohibited her doing anything with thinking, like writing. All in all, John decided everything. The protagonist stressed many times that she did not like this house. She thought the room liked a jail. For a long time, she had nothing to do, and then she became inferior and depressed. Finally, she paid her whole attention on the horrific yellow wallpaper. It was no doubt that she began to hallucinate. She regarded the person of the yellow…

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    Critical Synthesis: Discourse on “The Yellow Wallpaper” Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” is a story that has generated numerous scholarly conversations of literary criticism. Joyce Kinkead’s “Recommended: Charlotte Perkins Gilman”, Jane F. Thrailkill’s “Doctoring “The Yellow Wallpaper”, and Gillian Brown’s “The Empire of Agoraphobia” all address the life of the narrator while differing in the aspect of her place in society. Ideas of feminism, psychology, and agoraphobia are…

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    reside in endemic areas. The number of cases of yellow fever has been increasing drastically since the 80’s. This is thought to be due to more people living in cities, less people being immune, people moving frequently and of course, climate change. Originating in Africa, it spread to South America in the 17th century via the slave trade. Since then, numerous major occurrences of the disease have occurred in Europe, Africa and the Americas. Yellow fever was seen as one of the most dangerous…

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