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    closer to the norm; however‚ when this is not attained‚ it has social ramification for the individual‚ such as being destroyed‚ stigmatized and attacked by society. The views and standards of society can lead to one becoming mad. In the text‚ “The Yellow Wallpaper”‚ by Charlotte Gilman‚ the narrator struggles to maintain her sanity after failing to find her place in the world as a new mother. To begin‚ the society’s views on gender roles and the lack of feminism force the narrator to negatively destroy

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    Written during a time of significant change for women‚ The Yellow Wallpaper tells a tale of a women who gathers courage to break free from an oppressive lifestyle. The ideals of the society suggested that women belong at home where they were to fulfill their prescribed roles as a wife and a mother. On the other hand‚ men were to rule out of home through politics and work. Gilman demonstrates how the imprisonment of the narrator‚ through John’s characterization and Jane’s thoughts‚ urges the narrator

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    belittled and restricted of freedoms and decision making. Glaspell’s play‚ Trifles‚ and Gilman’s "The Yellow Wallpaper"‚ are two comparative examples. These works show how females are tolerated only for their gender stereotyped tasks‚ and how their identities are contingent on their relationships to men‚ despite the male character’s negligence. • Brief Summary of trifles • Brief summary of The Yellow Wallpaper The female characters in these two works were restricted of their rights for identity freedom

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    “Feminism is no longer a term that’s used to enable or empower women” by Hill Clinton. The story is told by the narrator’s perspective‚ who is a woman of sensitive temper‚ and she is also a writer. She has been ill‚ and her illness has placed her in a weak position in relation to dominant John. As her husband and as her physician‚ John makes all of the narrator’s decisions for her‚ which really aggravates her‚ since she wants to be an individual. In the beginning‚ the narrator dreadfully wanted to

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    The Yellow Wallpaper. Gilbert’s chronical of her own descent into madness is set in a remote‚ isolated older home‚ with very beautiful surroundings‚ and more in particular and old nursery in which Gilbert is imprisoned for her own "sanity". The ironic point is that it is the cure for her " insanity" that creates the insanity she ultimately adopts. The narrator is a repressed woman with nowhere to go except madness. As a parallel to Kate Chopin"s " Story of an Hour" in which death was the escape

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    written during a different time period by a different social class‚ their stories are all linked in some way‚ shape‚ or form. All of these short stories share the boundaries women were not allowed to cross. The narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper” is forced into isolation by her loving‚ but dominant husband. Women of this time cannot speak up against

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    The Yellow Wallpaper composed by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Editha written by William Dean Howell both delineate a representative message of what little flexibility ladies had of the nineteenth century. The Yellow Wallpaper demonstrates a very specific example of what role and label women had during the nineteenth century. Seeing and handing-off‚ ladies had been overlooked while the men; rather locate a basic method to manage them‚ tossed them off to the side. In this story‚ the audience view a

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    The Yellow Wallpaper Questions: 1. What is the root of "hysteria"? Consider the prejudice in labeling “women’s diseases‚" including nervousness and depression (are others mentioned in the story?). What about "postpartum depression"? Consider the prejudice in labeling "women’s diseases. Hysteria is from the Greek word “Hustera” meaning womb. In the late 19th century it was used to label a number of women’s diseases believed to stem from a disturbance of the uterus. This would include childbirth‚

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    AP English 4 November 2013 Femininity in The Yellow-Awakening Just before the turn of the 19th century‚ two works were published in 1899‚ regarding similar topics associated with feminism such as the subordination of women and the importance of their self-expressions in the midst of the subordination. The Yellow Wallpaper and The Awakening are narrated from the point of view of a female protagonist‚ revealing the difficulties she and other women face due to commonly held views of female inferiority

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    Change can be good Most individuals don’t know Charlotte Perkins Gilman tells her story through “The Yellow Wallpaper”. According to The Literature Collection it stated “This tale combines standard elements of Gothic fiction (the isolated country minion‚ the brooding atmosphere of the room‚ the aloof but dominating husband) with the fresh clarity of Gilman’s feminist perspective”. Charlotte Perkins Gilman uses excitement to explore the narrator’s way to change such doing something she may not want

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