Infantilizing and Dehumanizing Women in the Victorian Era
In 1892, Charlotte Perkins Gilman published "The Yellow Wallpaper," a tragic short story told from the first person point-of-view tracing a woman's descent into mental illness. The narrator remains unnamed, highlighting the problem of lack of identity and lack of respect for women in Victorian society, the primary theme of the story. The title refers to the wallpaper adorning a room that becomes a prison cell, in which the narrator remains trapped. The room symbolizes the trappings of patriarchy, as the narrator's husband will not allow his wife access to the outside world. The husband likewise disallows access to creative outlets, and because of this, the narrator quickly goes insane. Yet rather than realize his complicity in her insanity or the insanity of his own actions, the husband remains convinced that what he does is in the best interest of his wife. Trapped by social conventions and gender roles and unable to express herself, the narrator of "The Yellow Wallpaper" succumbs to madness.
The narrator is from an upper middle class, white background, evidenced in her description of the colonial mansion she is trapped in. It is also described as a "hereditary estate." Class is integral to Gilman's feminist analysis, because a similar type of experience would not have been possible for women who were poor and therefore conscripted to working. The narrator notes that...
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