The story's female character is suffering from "temporary nervous depression a slight hysterical(1) tendency," and prescribed a …show more content…
S. Weir Mitchell, pioneer of the Rest Cure. The parallels between her experiences and those of the story are noticeable, as are implications of late nineteenth-century patriarchal and medical attitudes toward women, during that time.
As a fictional story, and nothing else, The Yellow Wallpaper depicts a postpartum woman driven to psychosis by an inept doctor who is also her husband. However, as a fictional autobiography, it is read as an "indictment of the nineteenth-century medical profession and its patriarchal attitudes." After the 1973 reissue of The Yellow Wallpaper, Gilman directly criticizes Mitchell's treatment, saying, "the real purpose of the story was to reach Dr. S Weir Mitchell, and convince him of the error of his ways." She claimed his rest cure brought her "perilously near to losing [her] mind."
Mitchell's "errors" by many accounts, far surpass his medical therapies alone. A tenacious male-chauvinist, by today's standards, he was vehemently opposed to women voting, and strongly against higher education. He felt it got in the way of being good wives and mothers, saying "there had better be none of it." Women's "finest nobleness" according to Mitchell, was "to be homeful for