Thursday, March 12, 2015

"The Yellow Wallpaper" Reaction

    The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is an ironically innocent title for a short story with such a dark plot. This narrative chronicles the mental deterioration of a woman, Jane, living in Victorian England. In line with the repressive undertone of the era, Jane's husband, John, restricts Jane in numerous ways to try to remedy her illness. But little does he know that his pressure only drives Jane further into madness. The climax of her collapsing mental state occurs when she is unified with the shadow of a woman she sees in the wallpaper covering her room. This ominous phenomenon has been the object of much debate among literary critics and scholars.
    This event, I believe, is the ultimate result of Jane's loneliness. To recover from her mental sickness she was prescribed extended stay in this bedroom, devoid of human interaction and physical activity. Early on in the story, Jane comments, "I don't like our room a bit. I wanted one downstairs that opened on the piazza and had roses over the window, and such pretty old-fashioned chintz hangings! But John would not hear of it" (Gilman 2). In her forced isolation, Jane spends days on end tracing the patterns in the ugly wallpaper, trying to reach some sort of conclusion in her otherwise fruitless life. The shadow of the woman largely symbolizes the failure of this medical treatment. What was meant to cure Jane of her mental pain only drove her deeper into instability. Jane copes with the lack of the human experience by mentally inhabiting the personality of the silhouette in the wall. While I don't agree with the notion that Jane literally assumed the form of this shadow, it's certainly true that Jane thought so. Readers must remember that the narrative is told from Jane's point of view. Whatever we read in the text is shaped by her mental state; we interact with the plot through Jane's eyes. When Jane claims she became the shadow in the wall, the real Jane is still lying in bed trying her best to make sense of her situation with insufficient mental capabilities.
Works Cited
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Yellow Wallpaper. N.p., n.d. United States Library of Medicine. Web. 11 Mar. 2015.

3 comments:

  1. That's a very appropriate quote that you picked out, about Jane WANTING the room with the view on the outside, a view of the lovely roses, and so on--but she is instead assigned the super-creepy nursery. Since this woman has been at least trying to accept everything that life, her society, and Doctor John tells her, she accepts the nursery too, and then…creeping.

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  3. (This is Casey)
    Great post Marcus. I thought that you clearly identified the theme of "The Yellow Wallpaper" and the unique style that Charlotte Gilman uses to convey the horrors of the "resting cure." However, I also thought that you could have used and identified more of the feminist aspects of "The Yellow Wallpaper" to identify the story's true purpose and meaning. For instance, if you would have included an observation about how Jane's imprisonment is both literally and metaphorically representative of the imprisonment that many nineteenth century women were subjected to by their husbands, your post would contain another level of perspective that would better help encompass Gilman's opinions and the meaning of "The Yellow Wallpaper."

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