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Symbolism In The Yellow Wallpaper

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The story The Yellow Wallpaper includes a deeper meaning of the dreadful wallpaper that the narrator comes to hate so much as a significant symbol in the story. The yellow wallpaper can represent many ideas and conditions, among them, the sense of entrapment and a distraction that becomes an obsession. Examine the references to the yellow wallpaper and notice how they become more frequent and how they develop over the course of the story. Why is the wallpaper an adequate symbol to represent the woman’s confinement and her emotional condition? Gilman uses first person point of view narration in this story to make the description of the color more impactful through her direct association of the color and Jane’s emotional reactions to it. A psychological …show more content…

Yellow is used for traffic signs because it is psychologically proven to be the most attention grabbing color. The reader may conclude from her life situation and her sad tone, describing the wallpaper surrounding her at all times that Jane is yielding to all of John’s constrictions of her activities and in doing so bringing her life to a point of slowing down speed. The narrator converses with herself throughout the story, she states; “I really have discovered something at last…. Sometimes I think there are a great many women behind [the wallpaper], and sometimes only one, and she crawls around fast, and her crawling shakes it all over.” (Gilman 749). In her mind, she is creeping around the house slowly obeying the laws and taking caution against John’s controls and restrictions of her so as to obey his laws. The yellow walls would be representative of his warning sign to her that he is in control and she must adhere. For example, the narrator states, “The color of the wallpaper is repellent, almost revolting: a smouldering unclean yellow, strangely faded by the slow-turning sunlight. It is a dull yet lurid orange in some places, a sickly sulphur tint in others” (Gilman 747). This description of yellow may put an image in the reader’s mind of unclean, unattractive, and unhealthy things. The narrator’s tone is exhausted and sad. The reader is most likely affected psychologically by the imagery and feels the way Jane feels about the

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