Preview

Fiction Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
879 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Fiction Analysis
English 102
Dr. Alexander
October 14, 2010
Fiction Analysis

The two short stories, “The Yellow Wallpaper” and “Story of an Hour”, are two very similar stories. They share similarities of feminism, freedom, and marriage.
The short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper”, written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is a story about the struggle of a woman to gain her freedom and to get her own life apart from her controlling husband. The physician, who also happens to be the woman’s husband, keeps her in a room, as a form of “treatment”. He claims that she is psychotic, but after reading the text, I felt that the woman was only driven to insanity because of the so called “treatment” that her husband set forth. From being kept in this room for so long, the woman starts to become obsessed with the yellow wallpaper on the walls. The woman begins to put herself down by saying things such as, "I meant to be such a help to John, such a real rest and comfort, and her I am a comparative burden already". The woman belittles herself and doesn’t give herself any credit because I feel that this is what her husband has put into her mind; that she isn’t worth anything and isn’t capable of anything.
The woman then tells the reader that she has a journal that she has kept secret from her husband. She talks about how the yellow wallpaper and how she finds it “revolting”. The fact that she has to keep this secret journal just shows that she is afraid of her husband, and that she has to keep secrets from him. Her husband has taken her freedom away from her by keeping her in the secluded room by driving her to believe that she is depressed and or psychotic.
As the summer begins, the woman starts to become obsessed with the yellow wallpaper. She talks of the unique patter behind the wallpaper, and she begins to think that the bedroom must have been a nursery. As the summer passes, the woman gets very tired and her husband threatens to send her away to another physician who she had

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    “The Yellow Wallpaper” follows a series of diary entries written by a woman who is suffering from postpartum depression. The women’s husband, John, is “a physician of high standing,” misdiagnoses her with hysteria and treats her with rest. This treatment “confines her to a room in an isolated country estate,” that John rented for the purpose of her treatment. John “expressly forbids her to do any work in the form of writing, her chosen occupation,” even…

    • 799 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Just before the turn of the 19th century, two works were published in 1899, regarding similar topics associated with feminism such as the subordination of women and the importance of their self-expressions in the midst of the subordination. The Yellow Wallpaper and The Awakening are narrated from the point of view of a female protagonist, revealing the difficulties she and other women face due to commonly held views of female inferiority during this time period. With these similarities aside, the two seemingly similar texts differ in how the female protagonists handle their situation of confinement within strict social conventions.…

    • 1033 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Yellow Wallpaper,” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is a short story centered around a woman who is “sick with nerves,” and her husband, John, a doctor, who prescribes rest and and a clear mind, absent of imagination, in order to cure her condition. For the duration of the summer, she is confined in an old nursery with torn, yellow wallpaper. As the story progresses, her mental state deteriorates, and she begins to see different images in the pattern on the wallpaper, eventually believing that she, herself is a woman that has climbed out of the wall. However, the narrator of the story is not simply nervous, as her husband suspects, but actually has a case of postpartum psychosis. Her husband’s ignorance and prescribed treatment for her clearly…

    • 1057 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The “The Yellow Wallpaper” story started off with a small family that moved into a new summer home to spend some time away. The narrator’s husband is her own physician, and he tells her that she needs rest away from people to recover from her mental illness. The main character’s favorite hobby is to write thoughts and ideas down on paper. She is also a mother, but she doesn’t mention her child that often due to the fact that she wasn’t able to take care of her baby. The narrator is a young woman, sometimes referred to as “Jane” who is suffering from severe mental illness; not being able to have freedom caused the narrator's health to fall into a worse pattern.…

    • 554 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The narrator in, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” suffers from depression, although her husband, who is a doctor, does not consider it an illness. Therefore, he keeps her on a strict rest cure. She is not allowed to do work of any form, not even care for her baby. All she allowed to do is rest in her room and breath in the air as prescribed by her husband. Because she spends most of her time in her room, she becomes obsessed with the yellow wallpaper in the room and it drives her to insanity. The lack of creative stimulation and relationships with others causes the narrator’s obsession with the yellow wallpaper which leads her to believe she is trapped behind bars in this yellow wallpaper.…

    • 1141 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On the surface, the narrator in The Yellow Wallpaper simply shows an insane woman who began suffering from depression after the birth of her child. The narrator was placed into a house, which was in the middle of nowhere, where she received dangerous treatment and often gets belittled by her husband, who is also her doctor. Her treatment required her not to do anything active, especially writing. Although some would conclude that the narrator of The Yellow Wallpaper is just about an insane woman struggling with post-partum depression and isolation, it shows the protagonists struggle with trying to break out of the mental constraints she has been placed under and her need for self-expression through her journal.…

    • 606 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” is an early work of feminism and mental illness awareness. Through the eyes of the narrator, we learn that she is struggling to get better after her husband John, a physician, offers ‘rest cure’ as a treatment for her depression (Brown 51). She soon becomes fixated with the imaginary woman that lurks within the yellow wallpaper. As the story goes on, the narrator progressively becomes more insane. This is shown as her only concern is the creeping woman in the wallpaper and how to catch her. As a result, we soon realize that the woman creeping in the wallpaper are parallel to the protagonist herself, both are trapped, “creeping” to get out and longing to be free. This essay…

    • 1017 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the narrator must deal with several different conflicts. She is diagnosed with “temporary nervous depression and a slight hysterical tendency” (Gilman 221). Most of her conflicts, such as, differentiating from creativity and reality, her sense of entrapment by her husband, and not fitting in with the stereotypical role of women in her time, are centered around her mental illness and she has to deal with them.…

    • 1469 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Why does the mental health of the woman in The Yellow Wallpaper, written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, seem to deteriorate throughout the entirety of the short story? The woman does not seem to be very ill; but, as time progresses, it can be assumed that her state of mind is slowly worsening. While her husband, John, is a physician, it is mentioned multiple times by the woman, that he may have misdiagnosed the illness that she does seem to possess. The images the woman sees in the wallpaper represent how unstable her mental health is, the way in which the wallpaper mirrors the image of her life, and how her mental health slowly fades when isolated from society for a long period of time.…

    • 1874 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fiction Analysis Essay

    • 866 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The children had already learned about “Dealing with the Whites,” as part of the many unpleasant realities they had to experience throughout their lifetime. The hatred among these children is also evident where Arnetta, Laura’s troop leader compares the white girls to wet Chihuahuas. “They smell like Chihuahuas, wet chihuahuas.” This statement made everyone that heard this laugh very heard. In addition, by the second day of the camping trip, all the other girls in the narrator’s troop…

    • 866 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The yellow wallpaper takes the readers on a journey that captures the mind through the powerful and vivid imagination of the narrator written diary showing imagery through her words and thoughts. Suppressed by her dominant husband, the creative narrator finds escape through her writing, which she uses to tell her story. The story begins when a socially accepted husband, a physician, tries to “fix” his wife to fit the standard of society; nevertheless, it only leads to her destruction. Forced to be normal, “so I take pains to control myself”, she puts on a façade to retain her marriage and social standing by acting as though her depression has not won the struggle. (Gilman)…

    • 1344 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Yellow Wallpaper takes place in a house a woman and her husband have just moved into. The house is described as strange and eerie, and the relationship between the husband and the wife is bizarre as well. The husband’s wife (the main speaker) wants to spend time going out and doing things, but her husband tells she cannot and that she’s not well and has to rest. Her husband practically forces her to rest in her bed all day, which is where the wife notices the strange wallpaper, and begins to imagine that there is a woman that is trapped in the yellow wallpaper. The wife begins to strip off the wallpaper savagely, where her husband then walks in on her and passes out after seeing what she was doing. The wife continues to rip off the yellow…

    • 491 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    fiction

    • 378 Words
    • 1 Page

    1. In the stories “A&P”, “Araby” and “My Oedipus Complex” the author used child/teenager voices to make the story more relatable to young readers. The use of child/teenager emphasizes their impulsive crave for attention. Children and Teenagers often can’t control their emotions and act o impulse. In all three stories the narrators tried to catch the attention of a female, in “A&P” the narrator “Sammy” needs the attention of the three girls while in “My Oedipus Complex” the Larry needs the attention from his mother and in “Araby” the narrator needs the attention of mangan’s sister.…

    • 378 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Yellow Wallpaper

    • 571 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The narrator is forced to stay in bed with nothing to do, but look at the wallpaper she is so disgusted of in her room. Just looking at it makes her so much more stress, and she insist to her husband the wallpaper has a woman trapped in it. Since he is the type of man that must see something in order to believe it, he does not acknowledge what she is saying and claims it is all in her mind and she needs is more rest. Being in her empty room soon causes the narrator to become insane and her believe she was the woman that was trapped in wallpaper and she is finally out.…

    • 571 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the nineteenth century, women were expected to stay home to raise the children and clean the house. Women were supposed to live their lives in the “domestic sphere.” This way of living is the way that John, the narrator's husband, expected her to live. The narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper” was not happy or willing to live this way and became ill. The yellow wallpaper used in the narrator's room symbolizes female imprisonment.…

    • 942 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays