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The Yellow Wallpaper

Decent Essays

Speculative Essay: The Yellow Wallpaper Supposedly taken place in a large, beautiful, Victorian home, “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman depicts the brain of a mentally unstable human being. The woman in the story speaks to the audience about the nursery/bedroom she is in, and the people continuously come through the door. Because the narrator of the story is mentally unstable, she is an unreliable source for the reader to depend for information on. Based on her illness and descriptions of the bedroom, it is easy to interpret that he woman is not in a gorgeous home, but in a mental institution. Since the author (the woman) is automatically defined as unwell in the mind, the audience cannot fully trust anything she writes …show more content…

The woman continuously gives descriptions of multiple items in the room, and they lead to the assumption of her being interned in an insane asylum. Since the title of the story is called “The Yellow Wallpaper”, one of the main features in the room is the wallpaper. It is the first thing that the woman sees as she walks into her bedroom at the house, and her first thought is “I don’t like [our] room one bit” (Gilman 781). She talks about how the wallpaper is “dull enough to confuse the eye” and it was “stripped off” all over “in great patches over the head of her bed” (Gilman 781). These statements that the woman makes are very contrasting to her original thought of how grand the house was. The descriptions of the wallpaper were introduced very early on in the story, as was the untrustworthy factor of the mentally ill woman; a detail appeared very quickly the audience. She continued on with describing the characteristics of how the room felt imprisoned, which was another key factor that …show more content…

The most important person to her in the story is her husband, John. Although it is stated by the narrator that John is her true husband, by descriptive details, it appears as if he is her caretaker or doctor. The woman says how they “came her solely on [her] account”, so she could get all of the “perfect rest” and air she could get (Gilman 781). A married couple would to move homes simply because one person wants to; everything that a couple would to needs to do what is best for one another. By John saying that they moved for the woman, it indicates that they most likely moved so she could be instituted for her being unwell in the mind. Also, Johns occupation is a physician, and he “does not believe that [the woman] is sick” (Gilman 780). Because the woman suffers from severe mental illness, John treats her more as a child than a wife or a patient. He continuously pats her on the head, makes sure that she has enough nutrients, and checks up on her frequently. The actions that she describes John doing are not normal for a regular married couple, which influences the audience’s opinion on John’s position in the woman’s life. The narrators likes to try and convince herself that John is in fact her husband, and believes that while she is in this “home”, and that he “takes all care from [her]” (Gilman 781). Again, this evidence proves the fact of

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