The talker of "Yellow wallpaper" is one of the most interesting and disturbing people among any stories I have ever read. She will never get a name, she will change through the story and will not give us a consistent character. This story shows how locking and control affects someone's idea and feeling. Although the narrator was initially introduced as an ordinary person, we immediately discovered that she got aggravated and had many problems affecting everyone around her.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman 's' yellow wallpaper', the hero symbolizes the influence of women's repression of the 19th century in society. With "yellow wallpaper", the author reveals that the narrator is embarrassed between hatred and love, but emotions are difficult to determine. These effects are created by using complex themes used in stories. It helps her repression and reflects her self-expression. Yellow wallpaper is a female repressive symbol and she believes her duties are limited to her wife and mother.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "Yellow Wallpaper" is a short story from the perspective of a woman who was written in 1892 and is considered "crazy". The narrator thinks that her madness is sick. But the narrator 's husband, John, believes that she has a temporary strain of tension. As the status of the narrator deteriorated, she began to see women moving behind the yellow wallpaper of their (WC) bedroom. The wallpaper attracts the attention of the narrator, so the result is that she is strange.
Alienation and loneliness of "yellow wallpaper" Charlotte Perkins In the story by Gilman "Yellow wallpaper", the narrator talked about a couple of things: she felt that she was sick, her brother and her husband believed She was not, her husband moved her to isolate her to an abandoned house, he controlled her every move, she felt she was not accompanied. All these contribute to the theme of alienation and loneliness of this story. The narrator is convinced that she is Marx and his alienation theory, and Marx wrote "About the Jewish question" in 1844. This is a written response to Bauer's work. In his work, Bauer said the Jews should give up their religion and fight for their citizenship. Bauer believes that Jews should be liberated from Germans and Christians. Marx 's view of liberation through democratic liberty contradicts this overall belief. In "Questions about Jews," Marx continues to criticize the universal concept of liberalism.