“ The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Gilman was written in 1892. Kate Chopin and Charlotte p. Gilman were two influential writers during the Women's Rights Movement. Both short stories teach the readers about the dissatisfaction of women in marriage. Men were a burden on women and kept women from happily living their lives. Women lived rough lives throughout the 1800s. Kate Chopin, an American born author wrote the famous story called “The Story of an Hour”.Kate Chopin was born Catherine O'Flaherty in St. Louis on February 8, 1850. Her mother, Eliza Faris, came from an old French family that lived outside of St. Louis. Her father, Thomas, was a highly successful Irish-born …show more content…
Her great-grandmother taught her to speak French and play piano, and related stories about her great-great-grandmother, a woman who ran her own business, was separated from her husband, and had children while unmarried. This woman great example for young Katie of a woman's strength, potential for independence, and the real workings of life's passions.(Kate Chopin Biography). “The Story of an Hour” conveyed the message of women deserving to be free. “Her fancy was running riot along those days ahead of her. Spring days, and summer days, and all sorts of days that would be her own”(Chopin 2). This statement conveys the overall theme of the story by showing the hope Mrs. Mallard has in life after being left a widow as a result of her husband’s death. She knew that her husband being gone, would mean she would have the rest of her life to herself. Once a woman was married, she belonged to her husband. Women during this time didnt have the right to divorce. “She breathed a quick prayer that life might be, it was only yesterday she had thought with a shudder that life might be long”(Chopin 2). This statement expresses Mrs. Mallard's sadness before and after finding out that her husband has died. She begins to see life differently, knowing that she will be able …show more content…
Charlotte Perkins Gilman born in July eighteen sixty was a feminist writer. She attended Rhode Island School of Design and published her best known short story in eighteen ninety-two(Schlesinger Library)Gilman was a writer and social activist during the late 1800s and early 1900s. She had a difficult childhood. Her father, Frederick Beecher Perkins was a relative of well-known and influential Beecher family, including the writer Harriet Beecher Stowe. But he abandoned the family, leaving Charlotte's mother to raise two children on her own. Gilman moved around a lot as a result and her education suffered greatly for it.Gilman married artist Charles Stetson in 1884. The couple had a daughter named Katherine. Sometime during her decade-long marriage to Stetson, Gilman experienced a severe depression and underwent a series of unusual treatments for it.After failed attempts to relieve her severe depression and remedy her troubled marriage to Charles Walter Stetson, Charlotte moved to California with her daughter Katharine in 1888. She turned to writing as a source of income and as a means to analyze the problems of living and raising a child as an independent and self-sufficient woman. In addition, she began lecturing to local women's and labor-oriented groups. In 1893, she received moderate acclaim for her collection of poetry In This Our World and began working as contributor and editor of the progressive magazine, The Impress . When the