Literary Analysis:
The Yellow Wallpaper
In 1892, the
rights for women were only beginning to be recognized, but to a very small
extent. The women’s movement had not come into full effect at that time, and
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story “the Yellow Wallpaper” sought to bring
attention to the unfair treatment of women that had been in effect for hundreds
of years. Although many critics focus on the women’s rights aspect of the short
story, there comes to part a key element that people seem to look over. Gilman
seemed to suggest in her text that the fault that caused the narrator her delve
into insanity was actually due to her seclusion, as well as her disability to
resort to creativity as a means for coping with her severe depression.
The narrator that
Gilman depicted did make reference to her husband John keeping her from her
writing on several occasions. He also frowned upon her ideas of remaining social
and not remaining in seclusion. Examples of this are seen in the text; in
paragraph 37 she explains her husband’s disdain for her to write. “There comes
John, and I must put this away, he hates to have me write a word.” In paragraph
63 the narrator also insinuates John’s wishes for her to remain alone. “When I
get really well, John says we will ask Cousin Henry and Julia down for a long
visit; but he says he would as soon put fireworks in my pillow case as to let
me have those stimulating people about now...”
These paragraphs
depicted her suffocating situation well. Her husband would not give her the
satisfaction of being around “stimulating people” which would not have beneficial
at all, but in fact would result in being detrimental to her mental well being.
A stimulant, or the help or companionship of friends most definitely can help
relieve a person from depression or at least uplift them for a little while. The
implications that her husband was forcing her against her will were very
unsubtle, and the narrator was even disapproving towards his thoughts as well
as wishes at some times.
In an article written by Lauren Spiro, the director of
the National Coalition for Mental Health Recovery, she recounts her tale of her
own experience in an environment that secluded her from society for the
purposes of mental health treatment. “What
remains very painful was the personal devastation of being locked up in a
mental institution, away from friends and family, at the age of 16 – a time in
my life when I so desperately needed to feel that I belonged, that I mattered,
that I was good. Hospitalization itself is seclusion. The agony, the torment,
the torture that I experienced is something I will never forget.” Spiro
continues to make the statement that the seclusion she was forced to endure
actually made her condition worse. In Gilman’s story, the same went for the
unnamed narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper.”
Cases like Spiro’s were not unheard of in the 1800s as well as
into the 1900s. Although the time of her treatment was nearly a hundred years
after the writing of “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the tortuous methods to restrain
women from society were prevalent. The “Rest Cure,” developed by Silas Weir
Mitchell, was a treatment designed to deal with nervous illnesses. This cure
was most often prescribed to women rather than men, and even Gilman was
subjected to the treatment.
The elements of the treatment basically turned the patient into a
being similar to that of an infant, completely incapacitated and unable to speak
or even feed themselves. Often patients were force fed and in order to maintain
some muscle mass were given electroshock therapy treatments. These treatments
were later described as a means to subject women to male authority, and were
thought to make the patient worse rather than better by many patients as well
as doctors.
The narrator in “The Yellow Wallpaper” was subjected to a form of
the Rest Cure treatment, and the effects were exaggerated by her utter
insanity. Gilman used this work to speak out strongly against the oppressive
nature of the Rest Cure; perhaps mainly due to the suffering that she had
endured herself due to the “cure.”
However, because of the narrator’s obviously creative mind, the
seclusion gave her the time to let her imagination get away with her. Perhaps,
she developed over time a mental disorder similar to that of schizophrenia or Dissociative
Identity Disorder (DID). Many of these disorders were not as popular or heard
of during that time however so it is possible that Gilman did not have either
of these in mind during the writing of the story.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s story “The Yellow Wallpaper” addressed
the cruelties towards women which they were subjected to during the late nineteenth
century into the early twenty-first. She made the statement that the treatments
that women were forced to endure were in fact, not beneficial but detrimental
to their health and well being. Her short story continues to remain an
important piece of work in literature that advocates women’s rights.
Works Cited
Spiro,
Lauren. "The Human Impact of Seclusion and Restraint." Http://ncmhr.org. N.p., 31 Mar. 2010. Web. 20 Nov. 2012. <http://ncmhr.org/downloads/HumanImpactOfSeclusionAndRestraint.pdf>.
"Rest
Cure." Http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk. N.p., 2009. Web.
22 Nov. 2012.
<http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/broughttolife/techniques/restcure.aspx>.