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Feminism : The Yellow Wallpaper

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Feminism in “The Yellow Wallpaper” While reading one can study the societal and feminist aspects of “The Yellow Wallpaper” and how they have helped change our society in ways like informing people about post-partum depression and its serious outcomes if not treated properly. While reading another thing to aspect to understand is what was happening in the world at the time Charlotte Perkins Gilman published this story that made it so well known. “The Yellow Wallpaper” is known as a feminist story with obvious slanders of a desperate need for change in society. Gilman getting “The Yellow Wallpaper” published was a big step forward in the feminist movement as well as for the health and well-being of women everywhere. Even today, Gilman’s …show more content…

This showed people who have never experienced post-partum what it’s really like and how the methods used back then were not only not working but they were making them go mad. Gilman wasn’t the only person who thought this way and spoke up about it. While suffering post-partum depression Gilman went to see a doctor by the name of Dr. S. Weir Mitchell who made her views of mistreatment of post-partum correct. Along with others that were treated by Dr. Mitchell thought the same way “Mitchell’s Rest Cure had been used on other literary figures—Walt Whitman, Edith Wharton, and Virginia Woolf—and other noted persons – Jane Addams and Winifred Howells, whose father, the editor William Dean Howells, was instrumental in the publishing of “The Yellow Wallpaper” (Korb 1). These are just the literary figures that spoke up about the mistreatment of their conditions, imagine all those women who never spoke up about their mistreatment and ended up with the same fate as the narrator in “The Yellow Wallpaper”. Women weren’t the only ones who thought this, notice how Mrs. Howell’s father was the editor who had a hand in getting “The Yellow Wallpaper” published. The courage Gilman had to publish this Tell-all-story about her experience with Dr. Mitchell, lead to a good change in society considering even today “at least 80 percent of women in the United States

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