Charlotte Perkins Gilmans The Yellow Wallpaper:
A Decent into Madness or Feminist Liberation or Both?
Charlotte Perkins Gilmans The Yellow Wallpaper chronicles the so-called rest cure of a nameless woman who has just given birth. The womans physician-husband supervises the cure, during which the narrator is denied all mental stimulation. Rather than growing less anxious, the woman instead becomes more restive and miserable. Her mind, denied the mental outlet she craves, looks for other forms of intellectual engagement. She fixates upon the wallpaper of her bedroom, convinced that there is a woman behind it, demanding to get out. By the last lines of the story, the woman behind the paper and herself have merged in her consciousness, as she peels the paper to liberate the woman and herself: Ive got out at last, said I, in spite of you and Jane! And Ive pulled off most of the paper, so you cant put me back! (Gilman).
Even before the woman becomes mentally unbalanced, the woman calls the paper an artistic sin, something that is sulphureous as hellish death. It is dull enough to confuse the eye in following, pronounced enough to constantly irritate, and provoke study, and when you follow the lame, uncertain curves for a little distance they suddenly commit suicide (Gilman). The paper is dull, much like the womans rest cure, and its suicidal tendencies mimic her own depression. It is yellow, the color of jaundice and illness.
There are indications that the depression arose around the time of the woman giving birth to her child, suggesting postpartum depression and her husbands inability to understand his wifes needs. Although it may also have a deeper cause, namely in the general refusal to allow women to write and express themselves fully. The specific prohibition against writing suggests as well that the man who both personifies male, patriarchal authority and physicians authority is using her illness as a pretext to bend her to his will.
This use of medical authority to force women to conform to specific social norms did not end with the late 19th and early 20th century, around when the story takes place and Gilman wrote, however. In Womens Encounter with Mental Health Establishment: Escaping the Yellow Wallpaper, one woman describes being institutionalized after relatively minor teenage experimentation with sex and drugs in the late 1960s. She notes the irony of being forced to take psychotropic pills for schizophrenia,...
At the beginning of the Gilman short story, she seems sane, if depressed. She claims to love her baby and husband, and expresses polite frustration with the fact that she is forced to rest, and her husband may be cross with her defiance of his advice, while writing. At the end of the story, she barely seems to recognize her husband, simply referring to him as the man she is crawling over to peel back the paper and liberate the woman behind the awful paper where she has been kept for so many months. The lack of stimulation has made her into the madwoman she was supposed to be at the very beginning of the tale.Shawn St. Jean argues that, given the text has been printed and reprinted multiple times in various editions, that certain versions of the text more decisively indicate the womans madness than others: for example, in one printed version of the text, editing it to suggest that the woman must repeatedly climb over her husband as she encircles the room suggests a more complete descent into madness (St. Jean 402). It is equally possible to argue, however, that the real significance is the narrator referring to the man she once called John, her husband, and her physician simply as a man is a recognition that all are fused into one in his exemplification of male-dominated authority. There is no real romantic love in this story, or medical knowledge, only oppression that the woman must climb over. Madness is the narrators only vehicle of liberation.
Barbara Suess in her essay The Writings on the Wall similarly argues that the story highlights the limits of female expression, specifically the breakdown of writing and language. It is not simply…
Works Cited
Clift, Elaine. Women’s Encounter with Mental Health Establishment: Escaping the YellowWallpaper. New York, NY: Routledge.
Davison, Carol Margaret. “Haunted House/ Haunted Heroine Female Gothic Closets in ‘TheYellow Wallpaper’.” Women’s Studies, vol. 33 issue 1, Jan/Feb 2004, pp.47-75.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Project Gutenberg. Web.
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1952/1952-h/1952-h.htm
St. Jean, Shawn. “Hanging ‘The Yellow Wallpaper:’ Feminism and textual studies.” FeministStudies, vol. 28, issue 2, Summer 2002, pp.397-379.
Suess, Barbara A. “The Writing’s on the Wall: Symbolic Order in “The Yellow Wallpaper.”Women’s Studies, vol. 32, issue 1, Jan/Feb 2003, p. 79-97“The Yellow Wallpaper,” the ‘Nervous’ Disease and Hysteria: Medical Predecessors toNeurasthenia.” Grade Saver. 30 Nov. 2008. Web.
Yellow Wallpaper portrays that the protagonist in the story, Jane is mentally disturbed. Due to various factors and social pressures, Jane is affected with a mental condition that causes her to lose her mind and be out of touch with reality. The diagnoses that can be made about Jane from The Yellow Wallpaper are of Schizophrenia, Paranoid Type and Bipolar Disorder Type I. Schizophrenia- Paranoid Type As defined in the DSM-IV (APA,
As the narrator is denied access to the world and the normal expression of her individuality, so she becomes a true prisoner of the room with the yellow wallpaper. Her life and consciousness becomes more restricted until the wallpaper becomes an animated world to her. There is also the implied suggestion in this process of a conflict between the rational and logical world, determined and controlled by male consciousness, and
I fancy it is the pattern that keeps her so still... It keep me quiet by the hour" (Hunt, 179). With this, it is clear that Gilman sees herself as trapped in a very disruptive and confined world, one which ultimately drives her insane; also, this mysterious woman is a symbol of her physical self caught within a maze of confusion and despair, all because of the "yellow wallpaper"
Yet, in this case, the freedom that the author is talking about is not necessarily the liberation of women from the oppressive male society, but the freedom of each individual with mental problems to having a socially integrated life, with little or no confinement that would also make the mental problems develop. In conclusion, although it may seem that "The Yellow Wallpaper" is a short story written with a feminist
Yellow Wallpaper" and Mental Illness in Women Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" is an important short story that delves into the issue of mental illness. It illustrates how women and their problems are trivialized, with this closely related to the role that women have in society. Through the story, it is seen that women become prisoners of their mental illness because the medical community will not help them. This
Similarities in Theme in the Two Stories Prisoners: Both of these stories place the characters in a kind of prison. On the first page of Yellow Wallpaper the narrator has already explained that the reason she doesn't get well is because of her husband. An irony of huge magnitude, to say that one's husband is a physician and that "perhaps" that is the reason "I do not get well faster" (3).
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