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    al, 2013, p. 1847). Modernistic writers are purveying messages to try and break societies hold on their oppressive situations. Reoccurring themes I have seen in both The Yellow Wall-Paper and Street Scene are suppression of women, madness and the inability to find happiness without it being followed by tragedy. The Yellow Wall-Paper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman was the story of a woman who felt isolated by her husband and by society. The woman who was narrating this story, is so limited in…

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    The Yellow Wallpaper is a short story written by American author Charlotte Perkin Gilman and was first published in The New England Magazine in 1892. (Wikipedia, n.d.) The story follows the mental breakdown of a young woman, a wife, and new mother, and is told through a series of nine journal entries. One of the underlying themes of the story revolves around the likelihood that the main character's neurosis is resulting from what we would today consider postpartum depression. This is a…

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    One may say that a woman’s work is never done. Many American women grow up with this embedded in their minds and feel it to be true Charlotte Perkins Gilman, published in 1892 in the New England Magazine, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” argues that after being observed by a physician for severe and continuous nervous breakdowns and beyond, that not using the remnants of intelligence that remained left her near the borderline of utter mental ruin. Gilman successfully built her narratives in the short…

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    The setting of “The Yellow Wallpaper” takes place in a colonial mansion. The mansion seems very eerie; the author compares it to a haunted house. The author’s tone gives the reader a clear idea of the type of story it will be. The narrator begins the story by talking about her husband, John; she tells the audience that he is a doctor and explains that she is sick. Charlotte Gillman uses symbolism, irony, and similes to strengthen the story line of “The Yellow Wallpaper”. The narrator seems to…

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    “The Yellow Wallpaper” “The Yellow Wallpaper” was written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (the story was taken from the book Literature Craft & Voice written by Delbanco and Cheseuse) and is about a woman suffering from postpartum depression. The story main focus is about the popular treatment for this illness in women back in those days called the ‘rest cure’ which almost ruin the authors mental health. She wanted to write this story to help other women prevent going through this situation.…

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    Injustice in Women 's Mental Health Care Female inequality is a touchy subject but is very much real. Females have fought long and hard to get where they are today but still have a long way to go. Charlotte Perkins Gilman wrote a short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” that gives readers an idea of how mental health care was in the late 1800’s to early 1900’s. Health care has improved drastically since this time period so 21st century readers can be shocked at how inhumane this story may seem. John…

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    “The Yellow Wallpaper”, a short story written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is a narrative about the mistreatment, belittlement and submissiveness of the narrator, and her mental illness. The story also exemplifies the treatment of women in marriages during the 1800’s. The Yellow Wallpaper clearly depicts the oppression of women in marriages over the last few centuries, but especially during this time period. The short story shows the downplay of women suffering from mental illnesses, and the…

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    The Yellow Wall-Paper: [Mental Prison] Gilman, O’Connor, and Chopin, are a few of the many that impacted us in many ways. Each of the short story’s we have read had a different purpose in their literature. After reading Gilman’s literature I have found myself related to her experiences because at some point we experience medical issues. Even though we may not realize it we all suffer from a health issue whether it is an anxiety, overthinking, and even focusing. I like the character suffer from…

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    The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is one of the earlier feminist pieces regarding women’s health in the 19th century. Set in a large manor left untenanted. The potentially unnamed first person narrator struggles with being isolated and restrained from everyday life. The protagonist for the large part is left in an old children’s room, with the bed chained to the floor, bars in the window, and vexing yellow wallpaper. There she rests, and waits to get better. As her mental…

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    In Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper,” Gilman illustrates how women in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries had no basic rights and experienced severe oppression in many aspects of their lives. Women who lived in this time were treated much differently than they are today. Even when suffering from serious illness, the story’s protagonist, Jane, is not taken seriously. This ultimately leads to her demise. By illustrating the main character’s depression, the author…

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