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Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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Charlotte Perkins Gilman is one of America’s most well known feminist writers and social reformers. In “The Yellow Wallpaper” Gilman uses exaggerated literary elements such as setting, symbolism, and character to illustrate the dangers of the mistreatment and disregard of female intelligence during the early 19th century.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman was born on July 3, 1860 in Hartford, Connecticut. Gilman grew up in Providence, Rhode Island with her mother after having been abandoned by her father. Gilman’s mother refused to show any form of comfort or affection towards her daughter because her mother believed that this made women weak and did not want that for Charlotte. Gilman’s mother however would, on rare occasion, caress her daughter while …show more content…
A few years later, at the age of 24, Gilman “reluctantly married” a fellow Rhode Island artist by the name Charles Walter Stetson. After having their first and only child Katherine Beecher, Gilman developed what is known today as postpartum depression. Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, however, was not particularly knowledgeable about such an illness and prescribed Gilman to give up all forms of work, spend as much time with her child, and to “live as domestic a life as possible” (). Such advice led Gilman to describe her situation as “near the borderline of utter mental ruin” (). Four years after marring Stetson, Gilman decided to leave him and moved to California. It was while living in California that Gilman wrote her most famous work “The Yellow Wallpaper”. Soon there after Gilman decided to send her daughter, Katherine, to stay with her father and stepmother while Gilman moved to Chicago to study and live at the Hull House. In 1900, Gilman married her younger first cousin George Houghton Gilman. During the marriage Gilman had reoccurring periods of depression, however, Gilman still found the strength to write and publish …show more content…
John, the narrator’s husband is the standard example of what a husband in the early 19th century was. John is a loving, kind, and protective husband; but at the same time very controlling and condescending. Gilman uses a standard image of a husband to show the reader that this is the kind of man that is expected; and although John loves his wife and wants to protect her and help her get better he is not always right. His beliefs could end up driving his wife insane because he keeps disregarding her thoughts on her own treatment. John refers to his wife as a “blessed little goose” (Gilman), infantilizing his wife as she sits in a nursery. This further emphasizes the over barring and controlling role of the husband over the submissive

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