Friday, August 2, 2019
Symbols and Symbolism Essay - Imagery and Symbolism in The Yellow Wallpaper :: Yellow Wallpaper essays
Imagery and Symbolism in The Yellow Wallpaper        On my first reading of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper", I  found the short story extremely well done and the author, successful at getting  her idea across.Ã   Gilman's use of imagery and symbolism only adds to the  reality of the nameless main character's sheltered life and slow progression  into insanity or some might say, out of insanity.Ã        The short story is written in first person and it is from our nameless  character's writing's that we are introduced to her world and her life.Ã   It  is through this that we see our main characters transition into a world that  only she has access to.Ã   She changes dramatically from our first meeting  while everyone else stays very flat and unaffected.Ã   This method is very  effective in that this story from someone else's perspective would not be as  real and understanding.Ã   The outside world would have written about a crazy  woman who slowly goes mad for no reason.Ã   Only through her eyes can we see  the true reason for her, not madness, epiphany.     The story begins when she and her husband have just moved into a colonial  mansion to relieve her chronic nervousness.Ã   An ailment her husband has  conveniently diagnosed.Ã   The husband is a physician and in the beginning of  her writing she has nothing but good things to say about him, which is very  obedient of her.Ã   She speaks of her husband as if he is a father figure and  nothing like an equal, which is so important in a relationship.Ã   She  writes, "He is very careful and loving, and hardly lets me stir without special  direction."Ã   It is in this manner that she first delicately speaks of his  total control over her without meaning to and how she has no choices  whatsoever.Ã   This control is perhaps so imbedded in our main character that  it is even seen in her secret writing; "John says the very worst thing I can do  is to think about my condition...so I will let it alone and talk about the  house."Ã   Her husband suggests enormous amounts of bed rest and no hu   man  interaction at all.Ã   He chooses a "prison-like" room for them to reside in  that he anticipates will calm our main character even more into a comma like  life but instead awakens her and slowly but surely opens her eyes to a woman  tearing the walls down to freedom.  					    
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