The Yellow Wallpaper Analysis

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Back when The Yellow wall-paper was first introduced by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, it was known as a chilling tale between a woman and her husband and how he treats her as his own patient. The story continues to go on as the woman begins to have a battle in her own mind as she is confined in an upstairs room. As time went on, the story became more known as playing gender specific roles. The Yellow Wallpaper is a strong symbol in the story of how women should not be any less dominant than the man in any relationship. The main problem in the story is not the yellow wall-paper, but how it affects Jane (the main character/the narrator). Jane’s husband John has his own opinion about his wife’s health. John’s “treatment” is to keep Jane confined …show more content…

John tells Jane that she is the only person who can make herself better. I think that this confuses Jane because her husband is giving her treatment when he specifically said that she can fix the problem. John is formed by that narrator into a person who is more superior than his wife. The story reveals this through quoting things that are gender specific such as “John laughs at me, but one expects that in marriage.” I think that John has a very high ego because his own opinion about himself and how mature and intelligent he is leads his wife to feel underdeveloped and unappreciated which makes her not able to stand up for herself over the littlest things without being beaten down. This goes back to the theme I have chosen about how men are supposedly more dominant in marriage. John is unaware of the fact that he is Jane's problem. She follows in her husband's footsteps by thinking that he knows best. For example when the text says; "I tried to have a real earnest, reasonable talk with him the other day, and tell him how I wish he could let me go and make a visit to cousin Henry and Julia. But he said I wasn't able to go, nor able to stand it after It after I got there." This shows me that John might only be saying this only to confuse Jane, although he may be completely