Virginia Woolf is a British writer born in 1882 and she died a horrific death in 1941. She jumped unto River Ouse wearing an overcoat filled with rocks. She committed suicide as she was depressed and has a pessimistic feeling towards life due to a mental illness she has been cursed with. She wrote ‘The Death of the Moth’ in 1942. This essay contains a wide variety of rhetorical devices that makes it intriguing. Although the essay is short, she wrote a detailed story with an underlying metaphor.…
Many people deal with post-traumatic depression and it can have a huge impact on one’s life. In the short story by Charlotte Perkins Gillman, “The Yellow Wallpaper”, the main character, as well as the narrator, is an unnamed woman dealing with post-traumatic depression. The exceptionally imaginative protagonist’s metamorphosis is due to her isolated confinement in a room with “yellow wallpaper” in order for her to recover from depression. This type of treatment is prescribed by her physician and husband, John, whose controlling personality demands the main character to get bed rest in a secluded room and forbid her to participate in any creative activity that would exercise the mind, which affects her ability to express any thoughts through her enjoyment in writing. At one time, the narrator’s exquisite imagination might have found a productive escape through her sporadic writing, but forced to repress her thoughts instead leads to her growth in madness. The narrator from “The Yellow Wallpaper” is an example of a dynamic character by the change of her mental condition from her oppressed life, the yellow wallpaper, and search for freedom.…
Quawas’ article claims that in “The Yellow Wallpaper”, the narrator’s descent into madness is actually her descent into becoming what is defined as the New Woman. The New Woman demands an individuality and freedom to pursue her own path in life, rather than submitting to the repression of the Victorian “pure woman”. Quawas points out that in Victorian society, writing was considered an act of independence and rebellion for women. Through the narrator’s writing, the birth of her sense of self becomes clear where the use of “I” increases dramatically towards the end of the narrative. Quawas argues that the narrator’s insanity is not a “breakdown”, but a “breakthrough”. Therefore, Gilman’s narrator has achieved a more advanced state of mind that…
In Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story The Yellow Wallpaper, the female protagonist veers from the majority of patriarchal societies because of her distinct feelings of frustration, alienation, and emotional and creative repression within this social formation. Ultimately, in order to escape this early twentieth century state of mind, the female protagonist goes insane. However tragic this may appear on the surface, the suggestion of deliverance from her restricted environment is one of freedom of the dominant culture. Although the narrator escapes the narrow restraints of mentality through insanity, the underlying themes of The Yellow Wallpaper help to shed light on the narrators’ delirium.…
Her solace tone really helps establish her purpose. Woolf keeps a constant tone throughout her essay which helps us really grow on and adapt to what she's trying to convey to the reader. One example of her solace tone is when she writes: “One could not help watching him. One, was, indeed, conscious of a queer feeling of pity for him. The possibilities of pleasure seemed that morning so enormous and so various that to have only a moth’s part in life, and a day moth’s at that, appeared a hard fate, and his zest in enjoying his meager opportunities to the full, pathetic.” This helps the reader become sympathetic towards how the moths life is slowly coming to an end. Another phrase that stood out to me is “The helplessness of his attitude roused me. It flashed upon me that he was in difficulties; he could no longer raise himself; his legs struggled vainly. But, as I stretched out a pencil, meaning to help him to right himself, it came over me that the failure and awkwardness were the approach of death. I laid the pencil down again.” She was trying to help the butterfly, help it get back to his feet. But she stopped herself and laid the pencil down again to show the reader how much effort is given even when the moth knows the end is near. Her tone creates an image of how the struggle is between life and death. Allowing the reader to become sympathetic and to help grow a feeling of appreciation for life.…
Literature is an indispensable tool for a better understanding of society, culture, lifestyle, customs, traditions, habits and values. It is also used to communicate one’s feelings serving as refuge in times of conflicts. With this on mind, let’s also recall the inequality between genders that has been portrayed through literature. It has reinforced the stereotypes of civilizations; females as wives, and mothers while males as husbands, and fathers. Failing to fulfill these roles brings distress to all.…
Virginia Woolf’s purpose in writing this piece is to remind us of the power that death has over life. She shows us the desperation of attempting to avoid death but also the inescapable ending of…
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” is an early work of feminism and mental illness awareness. Through the eyes of the narrator, we learn that she is struggling to get better after her husband John, a physician, offers ‘rest cure’ as a treatment for her depression (Brown 51). She soon becomes fixated with the imaginary woman that lurks within the yellow wallpaper. As the story goes on, the narrator progressively becomes more insane. This is shown as her only concern is the creeping woman in the wallpaper and how to catch her. As a result, we soon realize that the woman creeping in the wallpaper are parallel to the protagonist herself, both are trapped, “creeping” to get out and longing to be free. This essay…
‘THERE is grey in your hair. Young men no longer...’ In these first two lines Yeats has set the basis of what the poem will be about, comparing Maud to what she was like when she was young and what she is like during the writing of the poem. Yeats switches between the past and the present to present this but instead of using the past tense he goes back to how he remembers Maud and uses it as the present. It can therefore be inferred that Yeats does not want to let go of the past but has done it for so long that it has become his reality, it is no longer just in his dreams. The dream he is living is then broken when he sees her again looking old and grey.…
Woolf uses beautiful metaphor to explain the “phantom.” She likens it to an “Angel”, and calls her “The Angel in the House” (274), and continues “It was she who bothered me and wasted my time and so tormented me that at last I killed her”, and describes her briefly: “She was intensely sympathetic. She was immensely charming…” (274). Woolf also makes a strong imagination of herself “writing a novel in a state of trance”: “The image of a fisherman lying sunk in dreams on the verge of a deep lake with a rod held out over the water” (276).These literary figures attracted me…
the reader to Woolf's description. We all are helpless and hopeless (much like the moth) against “a…
Life is a constant struggle against the ever present chill of death. Fear, betrayal, and cowardice all stems from life’s distaste of death. Human beings naturally rebuke the unknown, so it is only logical that people fight the inevitability of death. However, most people are ignorant of the reality of one day dying, prompting writer Virginia Woolf to write the essay, “The Death of the Moth”, in order to convey the frailty of life whilst also showing the awesome might of death. In the essay, her main purpose is to show that the moth embodies the human race, and that death is an inevitable fact of life no matter how much the human race struggles to stay alive. Woolf is able to get her purpose across by utilizing her unique style of writing. This is achieved by sympathizing with the moth throughout the essay, switching the narration between her internal personal struggles and external struggles of the moth, and changing the entire tone of the essay when the different themes of life and death are explored. Using her distinct writing style, Woolf delves into the wonders of life, and the ever present battle against death.…
In her book, A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf wrote a series of essays beginning with the state of the female novelist and expanding from there. In her closing essay she writes a public service announcement of sorts, calling out to her audience, the female ones in particular, to write books of all forms and variety, in spite of the difficulties that stand in front of them. Woolf asserts that not only they stand to benefit from writing good literature, but so do the generations to come. Foremostly her warning existed due to the current situations that surrounded her, and the ease with which the status quo could exist. Woolf prompts the reader to be uncomfortable existing state of affairs. And there is a dreadful outcome in the inverse of advised result. Again a transformation like that aforementioned could occur, the female writers Woolf so strongly advocated for siding with and assisting the very men that systemically put the women in this place. It would have changed in its own right both the previous and current state perpendicular to their direction previously. Furthermore, the memory of why change was needed, and the actions of change itself, would become neglected and eventually forgotten. And this exactly is the…
When Mrs. Mallard got the news of her husbands death, she immediately raced upstairs to set in her “comfortable, roomy airchair” (15). The armchair symbolizes the rest from the oppressive life she had and freedom from society 's expectations. Sitting in the armchair, she gazes out of the window and starts indulges in deep thought, which establishes her as an intelligent individual. The open window from which Mrs. Mallard gazes is symbolic for her freedom. Her attention to the blue sky, fluffy clouds, tree tops and the delicious breath of rain represents her newly found inner well-being. The writer 's use of language is well-chosen as it clearly portrays Mrs. Mallard 's true feelings. By capturing all the senses, the imagery created represents her new life and establishes her as a round character. The open window provides a clear and bright view into the distance of her own bright future, which was blocked by the demands of her husband.…
Throughout history, there have been countless individuals who have excelled in the art of written literature, and in particular poetry, who have also suffered from a form of mental illness (Sussman).These individuals are examples of the link between creative episodes and mental illness, and two of the most identifiable examples are Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton. Both Plath and Sexton were troubled individuals who suffered from manic depression and bipolar disorder, and both ultimately gave in to their suicidal tendencies and took their own lives. The eerie similarities between the lives of Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath continued into their written works, producing two sets of confessional literature with common themes. Both Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton shared the common themes of death, mental illness, and despair in their written works including The Bell Jar, “Sylvia’s Death,” “Her Kind,” and “Lady Lazarus”.…