Tuesday, May 28, 2019
The Yellow Wall Paper :: Literary Analysis, Gilman, Abcarian, Klotz
The Yellow Wall PaperThe Yellow Wall Paper is the baloney intimately a journey of a woman who is suffering from a nervous breakdown, descending into madness through her rest cure treatment. Basically, the woman is not allowed to read, preserve or to see her new-born baby. Charlotte Perkins Gilman captures the essence of this journey into madness by using the first person narration. The story plots is by taking the lector through the horrors of one womans neurosis to make strong statements about the oppression faced by women in their marriage roles. The narrators mental condition is characterized by her meeting with the wallpaper in her room. In addition to the storys plot, the use of symbolism and irony throughout her story also show how males dominate during her time.From Literature The Human Experience written by Abcarian and Klotz, Irony is figurative language in which the intended meaning differs from the real(a) meaning (1615). There is more than one level of irony at work in this story. Dramatic irony occurs when a referee or reference know things a character does not and, consequently, sees things differently (Abcarian & Klotz 1615). Gilman uses dramatic irony when the narrator states, Im feeling so much better (Gilman 1005) as if the narrator believe that she is normal, but when she states I think that woman gets out in the daytime And Ill tell you why-privately- Ive seen her (Gilman 1006), the reader knows that she is actually button in sane. It is dramatic irony because the readers understanding of the narrators speeches is different markedly from the narrators. Through this dramatic irony, Gilman has let the reader knows how complete seclusion can only add to the desolation and push people to the verge of insanity. The order of rest cure treatment may typify her husbands love towards her, but ironically it makes her condition worse. This plot symbolizes how women were oppressed and dominated by their husbands and they had no place for self e xpression.When the narrator states, I can see her out of my windows I see her in that long shaded lane, crawl up and down. I see her in those dark grape arbors, creeping all around the garden (Gilman 1006). The reader knows there is no actual woman trapped behind the wallpaper in fact this is a head game that seems to be caused by forced isolation as part of her treatment.
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