"Social constraints in the bell jar and the yellow wallpaper" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Yellow Wallpaper is a diary written by unnamed narrator who is going through depression. She gets to move for summer due to a ‘rest cure’ according to her husband‚ John‚described as a practical man by the narrator. She thinks that something is weird and strange about that house‚ but John thinks it’s just her fantasy and wants her to obey his cure. She stays in a room that she hasn’t picked up and forbidden from every exercising except ‘rest’. The narrator becomes obsessed with the yellow wallpaper

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    At the end of the story‚ the narrator locks herself in her room and continues stripping the wallpaper. She hears cries within the wallpaper as she tears it off. She anticipates jumping out of a window‚ but the bars prevent that; in addition‚ she is afraid of all the women that are creeping about outside of the house. As dawn comes around‚ the narrator has peeled off all the wallpaper and creeps around the perimeter of the room. John kicks down the locked door‚ and eventually breaks into the room

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    titled “The Yellow Wall- Paper”‚ and indeed‚ the dreadful wallpaper that the narrator comes to hate so much is a significant symbol in the story. The yellow wallpaper can represent many ideas and conditions‚ among them‚ the sense of entrapment‚ the notion of creativity gone astray‚ and a distraction that becomes an obsession. Examine the references to the yellow wallpaper and one notices how they become more frequent and how they develop over the course of the story. Why is the wallpaper an adequate

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    The Yellow Wallpaper There are many symptoms that arise when one is diagnosed with postpartum depression. Among the many is “obsessive-compulsive features‚ including intrusive‚ repetitive thoughts and anxiety.” You see this all throughout “The Yellow Wallpaper‚” and it begins when the narrator first describes the strange patterns in the incredibly symbolic wallpaper in the room that was once a children’s nursery: “It is dull enough to confuse the eye in following‚ pronounced enough to constantly

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    personal struggles and memories. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath is no different. The Bell Jar chronicles the journey of Esther‚a gifted writer‚ as she is sent into a spiraling depression until she is at the point of suicide. The book also chronicles her journey through recovery. The story told is not so different from what the author‚ Sylvia Plath‚ experienced in her youth. The experiences and beliefs of Sylvia Plath made an undeniable influence her novel The Bell Jar‚ making it a warped mirror of her

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    In “The Yellow Wallpaper” she gave an in-depth account of post-partum depression. It was a deep look into an ailing women’s mind. It gave a snapshot of medical practices in the late 1800’s. There was not much known about mental issues in those days. In “The War Prayer”

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    •In “The Yellow Wallpaper‚” Gilman uses the horror tale to analyze the position of women within the institution of marriage‚ practiced by the “respectable “classes of her time. •For the author‚ the conventional nineteenth-century middle-class marriage‚ with its distinction between the “domestic” functions of the female and the “active” work of the male‚ ensured that women remained as second-class citizens. •The story reveals that gender division had the effect of keeping women in a childish state

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    The Yellow Wallpaper Literary Analysis The short story by Charlotte Gilman about a woman who has become mentally ill covers many controversial topics that are still very prevalent today. The large issues that are covered are shown by the imagery throughout the story from the woman’s thoughts‚ the interactions with the characters‚ and the social normalcies at the time. A few times in the story‚ the speaker uses deep imagery to portray her extreme mental illness and obsessions with the patterned

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    The narrator in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story‚ "The Yellow Wallpaper‚" is truly insane from the very beginning of the story; she just falls deeper and deeper into insanity as the story progresses. In the beginning of the story she tells of how her husband diagnoses her insanity‚ "a slight hysterical tendency‚"(633). Later in the story she admits her own condition‚ "I get unreasonably angry with John sometimes…I think it is due to this nervous condition."(634). John‚ her husband‚ makes

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    motherhood is portrayed as being a burden to the lives of women in both Top Girls and The Bell Jar. What are the Parallels and Contradictions of the portrayal of Motherhood and Marriage between the two texts? The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath and Top Girls By Caryl Churchill both feature motherhood and marriage as one of their main themes even though the texts were set at different points in time. The Bell Jar was published in 1963 around the time of the publication of Betty Freidan’s Feminine Mystique

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