Thursday, August 15, 2019
Anaysis of the Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
http://www. sparknotes. com/lit/yellowwallpaper/context. html The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman Table of Contents Context Plot Overview Character List Analysis of Major Characters Themes, Motifs, and Symbols Important Quotations Explained Key Facts How to Cite This SparkNote Context Charlotte Perkins Gilman was best known in her time as a crusading journalist and feminist intellectual, a follower of such pioneering womenââ¬â¢s rights advocates as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Harriet Beecher Stowe, Gilmanââ¬â¢s great-aunt.Gilman was concerned with political inequality and social justice in general, but the primary focus of her writing was the unequal status of women within the institution of marriage. In such works as Concerning Children(1900), The Home (1904), and Human Work (1904), Gilman argued that womenââ¬â¢s obligation to remain in the domestic sphere robbed them of the expression of their full powers of creativity and intelligence, while s imultaneously robbing society of women whose abilities suited them for professional and public life.An essential part of her analysis was that the traditional power structure of the family made no one happyââ¬ânot the woman who was made into an unpaid servant, not the husband who was made into a master, and not the children who were subject to both. Her most ambitious work, Women and Economics (1898), analyzed the hidden value of womenââ¬â¢s labor within the capitalist economy and argued, as Gilman did throughout her works, that financial independence for women could only benefit society as a whole.Today, Gilman is primarily known for one remarkable story, ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaper,â⬠which was considered almost unprintably shocking in its time and which unnerves readers to this day. This short work of fiction, which deals with an unequal marriage and a woman destroyed by her unfulfilled desire for self-expression, deals with the same concerns and ideas as Gilmanââ¬â ¢s nonfiction but in a much more personal mode. Indeed, ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠draws heavily on a particularly painful episode in Gilmanââ¬â¢s own life.In 1886, early in her first marriage and not long after the birth of her daughter, Charlotte Perkins Stetson (as she was then known) was stricken with a severe case of depression. In her 1935 autobiography, The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, she describes her ââ¬Å"utter prostrationâ⬠byââ¬Å"unbearable inner miseryâ⬠and ââ¬Å"ceaseless tears,â⬠a condition only made worse by the presence of her husband and her baby. She was referred to Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, then the countryââ¬â¢s leading specialist in nervous disorders, whose treatment in such cases was a ââ¬Å"rest cureâ⬠of forced inactivity.Especially in the case of his female patients, Mitchell believed that depression was brought on by too much mental activity and not enough attention to domestic affairs. For Gilman, this course of treatment was a disaster. Prevented from working, she soon had a nervous breakdown. At her worst, she was reduced to crawling into closets and under beds, clutching a rag doll. Once she abandoned Mitchellââ¬â¢s rest cure, Gilmanââ¬â¢s condition improved, though she claimed to feel the effects of the ordeal for the rest of her life.Leaving behind her husband and child, a scandalous decision, Charlotte Perkins Stetson (she took the name Gilman after a second marriage, to her cousin) embarked on a successful career as a journalist, lecturer, and publisher. She wrote ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠soon after her move to California, and in it she uses her personal experience to create a tale that is both a chilling description of one womanââ¬â¢s fall into madness and a potent symbolic narrative of the fate of creative women stifled by a paternalistic culture.In purely literary terms, ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠looks back to the tradition of the psychological horro r tale as practiced by Edgar Allan Poe. For example, Poeââ¬â¢sââ¬Å"The Tell-Tale Heartâ⬠is also told from the point of view of an insane narrator. Going further back, Gilman also draws on the tradition of the Gothic romances of the late eighteenth century, which often featured spooky old mansions and young heroines determined to uncover their secrets.Gilmanââ¬â¢s story is also forward-looking, however, and her moment-by-moment reporting of the narratorââ¬â¢s thoughts is clearly a move in the direction of the sort of stream-of-consciousness narration used by such twentieth-century writers as Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and William Faulkner. Plot Overview The narrator begins her journal by marveling at the grandeur of the house and grounds her husband has taken for their summer vacation. She describes it in romantic terms as an aristocratic estate or even a haunted house and wonders how they were able to afford it, and why the house had been empty for so long.Her fee ling that there is ââ¬Å"something queerâ⬠about the situation leads her into a discussion of her illnessââ¬âshe is suffering from ââ¬Å"nervous depressionâ⬠ââ¬âand of her marriage. She complains that her husband John, who is also her doctor, belittles both her illness and her thoughts and concerns in general. She contrasts his practical, rationalistic manner with her own imaginative, sensitive ways. Her treatment requires that she do almost nothing active, and she is especially forbidden from working and writing.She feels that activity, freedom, and interesting work would help her condition and reveals that she has begun her secret journal in order to ââ¬Å"relieve her mind. â⬠In an attempt to do so, the narrator begins describing the house. Her description is mostly positive, but disturbing elements such as the ââ¬Å"rings and thingsâ⬠in the bedroom walls, and the bars on the windows, keep showing up. She is particularly disturbed by the yellow wa llpaper in the bedroom, with its strange, formless pattern, and describes it as ââ¬Å"revolting. â⬠Soon, however, her thoughts are interrupted by Johnââ¬â¢s approach, and she is forced to stop writing.As the first few weeks of the summer pass, the narrator becomes good at hiding her journal, and thus hiding her true thoughts from John. She continues to long for more stimulating company and activity, and she complains again about Johnââ¬â¢s patronizing, controlling waysââ¬âalthough she immediately returns to the wallpaper, which begins to seem not only ugly, but oddly menacing. She mentions that John is worried about her becoming fixated on it, and that he has even refused to repaper the room so as not to give in to her neurotic worries.The narratorââ¬â¢s imagination, however, has been aroused. She mentions that she enjoys picturing people on the walkways around the house and that John always discourages such fantasies. She also thinks back to her childhood, when she was able to work herself into a terror by imagining things in the dark. As she describes the bedroom, which she says must have been a nursery for young children, she points out that the paper is torn off the wall in spots, there are scratches and gouges in the floor, and the furniture is heavy and fixed in place.Just as she begins to see a strange sub-pattern behind the main design of the wallpaper, her writing is interrupted again, this time by Johnââ¬â¢s sister, Jennie, who is acting as housekeeper and nurse for the narrator. As the Fourth of July passes, the narrator reports that her family has just visited, leaving her more tired than ever. John threatens to send her to Weir Mitchell, the real-life physician under whose care Gilman had a nervous breakdown. The narrator is alone most of the time and says that she has become almost fond of the wallpaper and that attempting to figure out its pattern has become her primary entertainment.As her obsession grows, the sub-pattern of the wallpaper becomes clearer. It begins to resemble a woman ââ¬Å"stooping down and creepingâ⬠behind the main pattern, which looks like the bars of a cage. Whenever the narrator tries to discuss leaving the house, John makes light of her concerns, effectively silencing her. Each time he does so, her disgusted fascination with the paper grows. Soon the wallpaper dominates the narratorââ¬â¢s imagination. She becomes possessive and secretive, hiding her interest in the paper and making sure no one else examines it so that she can ââ¬Å"find it outâ⬠on her own.At one point, she startles Jennie, who had been touching the wallpaper and who mentions that she had found yellow stains on their clothes. Mistaking the narratorââ¬â¢s fixation for tranquility, John thinks she is improving. But she sleeps less and less and is convinced that she can smell the paper all over the house, even outside. She discovers a strange smudge mark on the paper, running all around the roo m, as if it had been rubbed by someone crawling against the wall. The sub-pattern now clearly resembles a woman who is trying to get out from behind the main pattern.The narrator sees her shaking the bars at night and creeping around during the day, when the woman is able to escape briefly. The narrator mentions that she, too, creeps around at times. She suspects that John and Jennie are aware of her obsession, and she resolves to destroy the paper once and for all, peeling much of it off during the night. The next day she manages to be alone and goes into something of a frenzy, biting and tearing at the paper in order to free the trapped woman, whom she sees struggling from inside the pattern.By the end, the narrator is hopelessly insane, convinced that there are many creeping women around and that she herself has come out of the wallpaperââ¬âthat she herself is the trapped woman. She creeps endlessly around the room, smudging the wallpaper as she goes. When John breaks into th e locked room and sees the full horror of the situation, he faints in the doorway, so that the narrator has ââ¬Å"to creep over him every time! â⬠Character List The Narrator ââ¬â A young, upper-middle-class woman, newly married and a mother, who is undergoing care for depression.The narratorââ¬âwhose name may or may not be Janeââ¬âis highly imaginative and a natural storyteller, though her doctors believe she has a ââ¬Å"slight hysterical tendency. â⬠The story is told in the form of her secret diary, in which she records her thoughts as her obsession with the wallpaper grows. Read an in-depth analysis of The Narrator. John ââ¬â The narratorââ¬â¢s husband and her physician. John restricts her behavior as part of her treatment. Unlike his imaginative wife, John is extremely practical, preferring facts and figures to ââ¬Å"fancy,â⬠at which he ââ¬Å"scoffs openly. He seems to love his wife, but he does not understand the negative effect his treat ment has on her. Read an in-depth analysis of John. Jennie ââ¬â Johnââ¬â¢s sister. Jennie acts as housekeeper for the couple. Her presence and her contentment with a domestic role intensify the narratorââ¬â¢s feelings of guilt over her own inability to act as a traditional wife and mother. Jennie seems, at times, to suspect that the narrator is more troubled than she lets on. Analysis of Major Characters The NarratorThe narrator of ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠is a paradox: as she loses touch with the outer world, she comes to a greater understanding of the inner reality of her life. This inner/outer split is crucial to understanding the nature of the narratorââ¬â¢s suffering. At every point, she is faced with relationships, objects, and situations that seem innocent and natural but that are actually quite bizarre and even oppressive. In a sense, the plot of ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠is the narratorââ¬â¢s attempt to avoid acknowledging the extent to wh ich her external situation stifles her inner impulses.From the beginning, we see that the narrator is an imaginative, highly expressive woman. She remembers terrifying herself with imaginary nighttime monsters as a child, and she enjoys the notion that the house they have taken is haunted. Yet as part of her ââ¬Å"cure,â⬠her husband forbids her to exercise her imagination in any way. Both her reason and her emotions rebel at this treatment, and she turns her imagination onto seemingly neutral objectsââ¬âthe house and the wallpaperââ¬âin an attempt to ignore her growing frustration.Her negative feelings color her description of her surroundings, making them seem uncanny and sinister, and she becomes fixated on the wallpaper. As the narrator sinks further into her inner fascination with the wallpaper, she becomes progressively more dissociated from her day-to-day life. This process of dissociation begins when the story does, at the very moment she decides to keep a secr et diary as ââ¬Å"a relief to her mind. â⬠From that point, her true thoughts are hidden from the outer world, and the narrator begins to slip into a fantasy world in which the nature of ââ¬Å"her situationâ⬠is made clear in symbolic terms.Gilman shows us this division in the narratorââ¬â¢s consciousness by having the narrator puzzle over effects in the world that she herself has caused. For example, the narrator doesnââ¬â¢t immediately understand that the yellow stains on her clothing and the long ââ¬Å"smootchâ⬠on the wallpaper are connected. Similarly, the narrator fights the realization that the predicament of the woman in the wallpaper is a symbolic version of her own situation. At first she even disapproves of the womanââ¬â¢s efforts to escape and intends to ââ¬Å"tie her up. â⬠When the narrator finally identifies herself with the woman trapped in the wallpaper, she is able to see that other women are forced to creep and hide behind the domes tic ââ¬Å"patternsâ⬠of their lives, and that she herself is the one in need of rescue. The horror of this story is that the narrator must lose herself to understand herself. She has untangled the pattern of her life, but she has torn herself apart in getting free of it. An odd detail at the end of the story reveals how much the narrator has sacrificed. During her final split from reality, the narrator says, ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢ve got out at last, in spite of you and Jane. Who is this Jane? Some critics claim ââ¬Å"Janeâ⬠is a misprint for ââ¬Å"Jennie,â⬠the sister-in-law. It is more likely, however, that ââ¬Å"Janeâ⬠is the name of the unnamed narrator, who has been a stranger to herself and her jailers. Now she is horribly ââ¬Å"freeâ⬠of the constraints of her marriage, her society, and her own efforts to repress her mind. John Though John seems like the obvious villain of ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaper,â⬠the story does not allow us to see him as whol ly evil. Johnââ¬â¢s treatment of the narratorââ¬â¢s depression goes terribly wrong, but in all likelihood he was trying to help her, not make her worse.The real problem with John is the all-encompassing authority he has in his combined role as the narratorââ¬â¢s husband and doctor. John is so sure that he knows whatââ¬â¢s best for his wife that he disregards her own opinion of the matter, forcing her to hide her true feelings. He consistently patronizes her. He calls her ââ¬Å"a blessed little gooseâ⬠and vetoes her smallest wishes, such as when he refuses to switch bedrooms so as not to overindulge her ââ¬Å"fancies. â⬠Further, his dry, clinical rationality renders him uniquely unsuited to understand his imaginative wife.He does not intend to harm her, but his ignorance about what she really needs ultimately proves dangerous. John knows his wife only superficially. He sees the ââ¬Å"outer patternâ⬠but misses the trapped, struggling woman inside. This ignorance is why John is no mere cardboard villain. He cares for his wife, but the unequal relationship in which they find themselves prevents him from truly understanding her and her problems. By treating her as a ââ¬Å"caseâ⬠or a ââ¬Å"wifeâ⬠and not as a person with a will of her own, he helps destroy her, which is the last thing he wants.That John has been destroyed by this imprisoning relationship is made clear by the storyââ¬â¢s chilling finale. After breaking in on his insane wife, John faints in shock and goes unrecognized by his wife, who calls him ââ¬Å"that manâ⬠and complains about having to ââ¬Å"creep over himâ⬠as she makes her way along the wall. Themes, Motifs, and Symbols Themes The Subordination of Women in Marriage In ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaper,â⬠Gilman uses the conventions of the psychological horror tale to critique the position of women within the institution of marriage, especially as practiced by the ââ¬Å"respectableâ⠬ classes of her time.When the story was first published, most readers took it as a scary tale about a woman in an extreme state of consciousnessââ¬âa gripping, disturbing entertainment, but little more. After its rediscovery in the twentieth century, however, readings of the story have become more complex. For Gilman, the conventional nineteenth-century middle-class marriage, with its rigid distinction between the ââ¬Å"domesticâ⬠functions of the female and the ââ¬Å"activeâ⬠work of the male, ensured that women remained second-class citizens.The story reveals that this gender division had the effect of keeping women in a childish state of ignorance and preventing their full development. Johnââ¬â¢s assumption of his own superior wisdom and maturity leads him to misjudge, patronize, and dominate his wife, all in the name of ââ¬Å"helpingâ⬠her. The narrator is reduced to acting like a cross, petulant child, unable to stand up for herself without seeming un reasonable or disloyal. The narrator has no say in even the smallest details of her life, and she retreats into her obsessive fantasy, the only place she can retain some control and exercise the power of her mind.The Importance of Self-Expression [pic] The mental constraints placed upon the narrator, even more so than the physical ones, are what ultimately drive her insane. She is forced to hide her anxieties and fears in order to preserve the facade of a happy marriage and to make it seem as though she is winning the fight against her depression. From the beginning, the most intolerable aspect of her treatment is the compulsory silence and idleness of the ââ¬Å"resting cure. â⬠She is forced to become completely passive, forbidden from exercising her mind in any way.Writing is especially off limits, and John warns her several times that she must use her self-control to rein in her imagination, which he fears will run away with her. Of course, the narratorââ¬â¢s eventual in sanity is a product of the repression of her imaginative power, not the expression of it. She is constantly longing for an emotional and intellectual outlet, even going so far as to keep a secret journal, which she describes more than once as a ââ¬Å"reliefâ⬠to her mind. For Gilman, a mind that is kept in a state of forced inactivity is doomed to self-destruction.The Evils of the ââ¬Å"Resting Cureâ⬠As someone who almost was destroyed by S. Weir Mitchellââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"resting cureâ⬠for depression, it is not surprising that Gilman structured her story as an attack on this ineffective and cruel course of treatment. ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠is an illustration of the way a mind that is already plagued with anxiety can deteriorate and begin to prey on itself when it is forced into inactivity and kept from healthy work. To his credit, Mitchell, who is mentioned by name in the story, took Gilmanââ¬â¢s criticism to heart and abandoned the ââ¬Å"resting cu re. Beyond the specific technique described in the story, Gilman means to criticize any form of medical care that ignores the concerns of the patient, considering her only as a passive object of treatment. The connection between a womanââ¬â¢s subordination in the home and her subordination in a doctor/patient relationship is clearââ¬âJohn is, after all, the narratorââ¬â¢s husband and doctor. Gilman implies that both forms of authority can be easily abused, even when the husband or doctor means to help.All too often, the women who are the silent subjects of this authority are infantilized, or worse. Motifs Irony Almost every aspect of ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠is ironic in some way. Irony is a way of using words to convey multiple levels of meaning that contrast with or complicate one another. In verbal irony, words are frequently used to convey the exact opposite of their literal meaning, such as when one person responds to anotherââ¬â¢s mistake by saying â⬠Å"nice work. â⬠(Sarcasmââ¬âwhich this example embodiesââ¬âis a form of verbal irony. In her journal, the narrator uses verbal irony often, especially in reference to her husband: ââ¬Å"John laughs at me, of course, but one expects that in marriage. â⬠Obviously, one expects no such thing, at least not in a healthy marriage. Later, she says, ââ¬Å"I am glad my case is not serious,â⬠at a point when it is clear that she is concerned that her case is very serious indeed. Dramatic irony occurs when there is a contrast between the readerââ¬â¢s knowledge and the knowledge of the characters in the work.Dramatic irony is used extensively in ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaper. â⬠For example, when the narrator first describes the bedroom John has chosen for them, she attributes the roomââ¬â¢s bizarre featuresââ¬âthe ââ¬Å"rings and thingsâ⬠in the walls, the nailed-down furniture, the bars on the windows, and the torn wallpaperââ¬âto the fact that it must have once been used as a nursery. Even this early in the story, the reader sees that there is an equally plausible explanation for these details: the room had been used to house an insane person.Another example is when the narrator assumes that Jennie shares her interest in the wallpaper, while it is clear that Jennie is only now noticing the source of the yellow stains on their clothing. The effect intensifies toward the end of the story, as the narrator sinks further into her fantasy and the reader remains able to see her actions from theââ¬Å"outside. â⬠By the time the narrator fully identifies with the trapped woman she sees in the wallpaper, the reader can appreciate the narratorââ¬â¢s experience from her point of view as well as Johnââ¬â¢s shock at what he sees when he breaks down the door to the bedroom.Situational irony refers to moments when a characterââ¬â¢s actions have the opposite of their intended effect. For example, Johnââ¬â¢s course of tre atment backfires, worsening the depression he was trying to cure and actually driving his wife insane. Similarly, there is a deep irony in the way the narratorââ¬â¢s fate develops. She gains a kind of power and insight only by losing what we would call her self-control and reason. The Journal An ââ¬Å"epistolaryâ⬠work of fiction takes the form of letters between characters. ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠is a kind of epistolary story, in which the narrator writes to herself.Gilman uses this technique to show the narratorââ¬â¢s descent into madness both subjectively and objectivelyââ¬âthat is, from both the inside and the outside. Had Gilman told her story in traditional first-person narration, reporting events from inside the narratorââ¬â¢s head, the reader would never know exactly what to think: a woman inside the wallpaper might seem to actually exist. Had Gilman told the story from an objective, third-person point of view, without revealing the narratorâ⠬â¢s thoughts, the social and political symbolism of the story would have been obscured.As it is, the reader must decipher the ambiguity of the story, just as the narrator must attempt to decipher the bewildering story of her life and the bizarre patterns of the wallpaper. Gilman also uses the journal to give the story an intense intimacy and immediacy, especially in those moments when the narrative is interrupted by the approach of John or Jennie. These interruptions perfectly illustrate the constraints placed on the narrator by authority figures who urge her not to think about herââ¬Å"condition. â⬠Symbols The Wallpaper The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠is driven by the narratorââ¬â¢s sense that the wallpaper is a text she must interpret, that it symbolizes something that affects her directly. Accordingly, the wallpaper develops its symbolism throughout the story. At first it seems merely unpleasant: it is ripped, soiled, and an ââ¬Å"unclean yellow. â⬠The worst part is the ostensibly formless pattern, which fascinates the narrator as she attempts to figure out how it is organized. After staring at the paper for hours, she sees a ghostly sub-pattern behind the main pattern, visible only in certain light.Eventually, the sub-pattern comes into focus as a desperate woman, constantly crawling and stooping, looking for an escape from behind the main pattern, which has come to resemble the bars of a cage. The narrator sees this cage as festooned with the heads of many women, all of whom were strangled as they tried to escape. Clearly, the wallpaper represents the structure of family, medicine, and tradition in which the narrator finds herself trapped. Wallpaper is domestic and humble, and Gilman skillfully uses this nightmarish, hideous paper as a symbol of the domestic life that traps so many women.Important Quotations Explained 1. If a physician of high standing, and oneââ¬â¢s own husband, assures friends and relatives that there is really nothin g the matter with one but temporary nervous depressionââ¬âa slight hysterical tendencyââ¬âwhat is one to do? . . . So I take phosphates or phosphitesââ¬âwhichever it is, and tonics, and journeys, and air, and exercise, and am absolutely forbidden to ââ¬Å"workâ⬠until I am well again. Personally, I disagree with their ideas . . . Explanation for Quotation 1 >> In this passage, which appears near the beginning of the story, the main elements of the narratorââ¬â¢s dilemma are present.The powerful, authoritative voices of her husband, her family, and the medical establishment urge her to be passive. Her own conviction, however, is that what she needs is precisely the oppositeââ¬âactivity and stimulation. From the outset, her opinions carry little weight. ââ¬Å"Personally,â⬠she disagrees with her treatment, but she has no power to change the situation. Gilman also begins to characterize the narrator here. The confusion over ââ¬Å"phosphates or phosphites â⬠is in character for someone who is not particularly interested in factual accuracy.And the choppy rhythm of the sentences, often broken into one-line paragraphs, helps evoke the hurried writing of the narrator in her secret journal, as well as the agitated state of her mind. Close 2. I sometimes fancy that in my condition if I had less opposition and more society and stimulusââ¬âbut John says the very worst thing I can do is think about my condition, and I confess it always makes me feel bad. So I will let it alone and talk about the house. Explanation for Quotation 2 >>This section appears near the beginning of the story, and it helps characterize both the narratorââ¬â¢s dilemma and the narrator herself. Notably, the narrator interrupts her own train of thought by recalling Johnââ¬â¢s instructions. Gilman shows how the narrator has internalized her husbandââ¬â¢s authority to the point that she practically hears his voice in her head, telling her what to think. Even so, she cannot help but feel the way she does, and so the move she makes at the endââ¬âfocusing on the house instead of her situationââ¬âmarks the beginning of her slide into obsession and madness.This mental struggle, this desperate attempt not to think about her unhappiness, makes her project her feelings onto her surroundings, especially the wallpaper, which becomes a symbolic image of ââ¬Å"her condition. â⬠The play on words here is typical of Gilmanââ¬â¢s consistent use of irony throughout the story. She feels bad whenever she thinks about herââ¬Å"condition,â⬠that is, about both her depression and her condition in general within her oppressive marriage. Close 3. There are things in that paper which nobody knows but me, or ever will. Behind that outside pattern the dim shapes get clearer every day.It is always the same shape, only very numerous. And it is like a woman stooping down and creeping about behind that pattern. I donââ¬â¢t like it a bit . I wonderââ¬âI begin to thinkââ¬âI wish John would take me away from here! Explanation for Quotation 3 >> About halfway through the story, the sub-pattern of the wallpaper finally comes into focus. The narrator is being drawn further and further into her fantasy, which contains a disturbing truth about her life. Gilmanââ¬â¢s irony is actively at work here: the ââ¬Å"thingsâ⬠in the paper are both the ghostly women the narrator sees and the disturbing ideas she is coming to understand.She is simultaneously jealous of the secret (ââ¬Å"nobody knows but meâ⬠) and frightened of what it seems to imply. Again the narrator tries to deny her growing insight (ââ¬Å"the dim shapes get clearer every dayâ⬠), but she is powerless to extricate herself. Small wonder that the woman she sees is always ââ¬Å"stooping down and creeping about. â⬠Like the narrator herself, she is trapped within a suffocating domestic ââ¬Å"patternâ⬠from which no escape is poss ible. Close 4. Life is very much more exciting now than it used to be. Explanation for Quotation 4 >>This comment comes just after the scene in which the narrator catches Jennie touching the paper and resolves that no one else is allowed to figure out the pattern. It captures one of the most distinctive qualities of ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠: Gilmanââ¬â¢s bitter, sarcastic sense of humor. Now that the narrator has become hopelessly obsessed with the pattern, spending all day and all night thinking about it, life has become more interesting and she is no longer bored. Gilman manages to combine humor and dread in such moments. The comment is funny, but the reader knows that someone who would make such a joke is not well.Indeed, in the section that follows, the narrator casually mentions that she considered burning the house down in order to eliminate the smell of the wallpaper. Close 5. I donââ¬â¢t like to look out of the windows evenââ¬âthere are so many of those c reeping women, and they creep so fast. I wonder if they all come out of that wall-paper as I did? Explanation for Quotation 5 >> Important Quotations Explained 1. If a physician of high standing, and oneââ¬â¢s own husband, assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depressionââ¬âa slight hysterical tendencyââ¬âwhat is one to do? . . So I take phosphates or phosphitesââ¬âwhichever it is, and tonics, and journeys, and air, and exercise, and am absolutely forbidden to ââ¬Å"workâ⬠until I am well again. Personally, I disagree with their ideas . . . Explanation for Quotation 1 >> In this passage, which appears near the beginning of the story, the main elements of the narratorââ¬â¢s dilemma are present. The powerful, authoritative voices of her husband, her family, and the medical establishment urge her to be passive. Her own conviction, however, is that what she needs is precisely the oppositeââ¬âactiv ity and stimulation.From the outset, her opinions carry little weight. ââ¬Å"Personally,â⬠she disagrees with her treatment, but she has no power to change the situation. Gilman also begins to characterize the narrator here. The confusion over ââ¬Å"phosphates or phosphitesâ⬠is in character for someone who is not particularly interested in factual accuracy. And the choppy rhythm of the sentences, often broken into one-line paragraphs, helps evoke the hurried writing of the narrator in her secret journal, as well as the agitated state of her mind. Close . I sometimes fancy that in my condition if I had less opposition and more society and stimulusââ¬âbut John says the very worst thing I can do is think about my condition, and I confess it always makes me feel bad. So I will let it alone and talk about the house. Explanation for Quotation 2 >> This section appears near the beginning of the story, and it helps characterize both the narratorââ¬â¢s dilemma and the nar rator herself. Notably, the narrator interrupts her own train of thought by recalling Johnââ¬â¢s instructions.Gilman shows how the narrator has internalized her husbandââ¬â¢s authority to the point that she practically hears his voice in her head, telling her what to think. Even so, she cannot help but feel the way she does, and so the move she makes at the endââ¬âfocusing on the house instead of her situationââ¬âmarks the beginning of her slide into obsession and madness. This mental struggle, this desperate attempt not to think about her unhappiness, makes her project her feelings onto her surroundings, especially the wallpaper, which becomes a symbolic image of ââ¬Å"her condition. The play on words here is typical of Gilmanââ¬â¢s consistent use of irony throughout the story. She feels bad whenever she thinks about herââ¬Å"condition,â⬠that is, about both her depression and her condition in general within her oppressive marriage. Close 3. There are things in that paper which nobody knows but me, or ever will. Behind that outside pattern the dim shapes get clearer every day. It is always the same shape, only very numerous. And it is like a woman stooping down and creeping about behind that pattern. I donââ¬â¢t like it a bit. I wonderââ¬âI begin to thinkââ¬âI wish John would take me away from here! Explanation for Quotation 3 >>About halfway through the story, the sub-pattern of the wallpaper finally comes into focus. The narrator is being drawn further and further into her fantasy, which contains a disturbing truth about her life. Gilmanââ¬â¢s irony is actively at work here: the ââ¬Å"thingsâ⬠in the paper are both the ghostly women the narrator sees and the disturbing ideas she is coming to understand. She is simultaneously jealous of the secret (ââ¬Å"nobody knows but meâ⬠) and frightened of what it seems to imply. Again the narrator tries to deny her growing insight (ââ¬Å"the dim shapes get clearer ever y dayâ⬠), but she is powerless to extricate herself.Small wonder that the woman she sees is always ââ¬Å"stooping down and creeping about. â⬠Like the narrator herself, she is trapped within a suffocating domestic ââ¬Å"patternâ⬠from which no escape is possible. Close 4. Life is very much more exciting now than it used to be. Explanation for Quotation 4 >> This comment comes just after the scene in which the narrator catches Jennie touching the paper and resolves that no one else is allowed to figure out the pattern. It captures one of the most distinctive qualities of ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠: Gilmanââ¬â¢s bitter, sarcastic sense of humor.Now that the narrator has become hopelessly obsessed with the pattern, spending all day and all night thinking about it, life has become more interesting and she is no longer bored. Gilman manages to combine humor and dread in such moments. The comment is funny, but the reader knows that someone who would make such a joke is not well. Indeed, in the section that follows, the narrator casually mentions that she considered burning the house down in order to eliminate the smell of the wallpaper. Close 5. I donââ¬â¢t like to look out of the windows evenââ¬âthere are so many of those creeping women, and they creep so fast.I wonder if they all come out of that wall-paper as I did? Explanation for Quotation 5 >> In the storyââ¬â¢s final scene, just before John finally breaks into her room, the narrator has finished tearing off enough of the wallpaper that the woman she saw inside is now freeââ¬âand the two women have become one. This passage is the exact moment of full identification, when the narrator finally makes the connection she has been avoiding, a connection that the reader has made already. The woman behind the pattern was an image of herselfââ¬âshe has been the one ââ¬Å"stooping and creeping. Further, she knows that there are many women just like her, so many that she is afraid to look at them. The question she asks is poignant and complex: did they all have to struggle the way I did? Were they trapped within homes that were really prisons? Did they all have to tear their lives up at the roots in order to be free? The narrator, unable to answer these questions, leaves them for another womanââ¬âor the readerââ¬âto ponder. Key Facts title à · ââ¬Å"The Yellow Wallpaperâ⬠author à · Charlotte Perkins Gilman type of work à · Short story genre à · Gothic horror tale; character study; socio-political allegory language à · English ime and place written à · 1892, California date of first publication à · May, 1892 publisher à · The New England Magazine narrator à · A mentally troubled young woman, possibly named Jane point of view à · As the main characterââ¬â¢s fictional journal, the story is told in strict first-person narration, focusing exclusively on her own thoughts, feelings, and perceptions. Everything that we learn or see in the story is filtered through the narratorââ¬â¢s shifting consciousness, and since the narrator goes insane over the course of the story, her perception of reality is often completely at odds with that of the other characters. one à · The narrator is in a state of anxiety for much of the story, with flashes of sarcasm, anger, and desperationââ¬âa tone Gilman wants the reader to share. tense à · The story stays close to the narratorââ¬â¢s thoughts at the moment and is thus mostly in the present tense. setting (time) à · Late nineteenth century setting (place) à · America, in a large summer home (or possibly an old asylum), primarily in one bedroom within the house. rotagonist à · The narrator, a young upper-middle-class woman who is suffering from what is most likely postpartum depression and whose illness gives her insight into her (and other womenââ¬â¢s) situation in society and in marriage, even as the treatment she undergoes robs her of her sanity. major conf lict à · The struggle between the narrator and her husband, who is also her doctor, over the nature and treatment of her illness leads to a conflict within the narratorââ¬â¢s mind between her growing understanding of her own powerlessness and her desire to repress this awareness. ising action à · The narrator decides to keep a secret journal, in which she describes her forced passivity and expresses her dislike for her bedroom wallpaper, a dislike that gradually intensifies into obsession. climax à · The narrator completely identifies herself with the woman imprisoned in the wallpaper. falling action à · The narrator, now completely identified with the woman in the wallpaper,spends her time crawling on all fours around the room. Her husband discovers her and collapses in shock, and she keeps crawling, right over his fallen body. hemes à · The subordination of women in marriage; the importance of self-expression; the evils of the ââ¬Å"Resting Cureâ⬠motifs à · Irony; the journal symbols à · The wallpaper foreshadowing à · The discovery of the teeth marks on the bedstead foreshadows the narratorââ¬â¢s own insanity and suggests the narrator is not revealing everything about her behavior; the first use of the word ââ¬Å"creepyâ⬠foreshadows the increasing desperation of the narratorââ¬â¢s situation and her own eventualââ¬Å"creeping. â⬠How to Cite This SparkNote Full Bibliographic Citation MLA: SparkNotes Editors. ââ¬Å"SparkNote on The Yellow Wallpaper. â⬠SparkNotes. com. SparkNotes LLC. 2006. Web. 2 Apr. 2013. The Chicago Manual of Style: SparkNotes Editors. ââ¬Å"SparkNote on The Yellow Wallpaper. â⬠SparkNotes LLC. 2006. http://www. sparknotes. com/lit/yellowwallpaper/ (accessed April 12, 2013). APA: SparkNotes Editors. (2006). SparkNote on The Yellow Wallpaper. Retrieved April 12, 2013, from http://www. sparknotes. com/lit/yellowwallpaper/ In Text Citation MLA: ââ¬Å"Their conversation is awkward, especially when she mentions Wickham, a subject Darcy clearly wishes to avoidâ⬠(SparkNotes Editors). APA: ââ¬Å"Their conversation is awkward, especially when she mentions Wickham, a subject Darcy clearly wishes to avoidâ⬠(SparkNotes Editors, 2006).Footnote The Chicago Manual of Style: Chicago requires the use of footnotes, rather than parenthetical citations, in conjunction with a list of works cited when dealing with literature. 1 SparkNotes Editors. ââ¬Å"SparkNote on The Yellow Wallpaper. â⬠SparkNotes LLC. 2006. http://www. sparknotes. com/lit/yellowwallpaper/ (accessed April 12, 2013). [pic] Please be sure to cite your sources. For more information about what plagiarism is and how to avoid it, please read our article on The Plagiarism Plague. 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