Treating crazy psychosis and madness with bell jars and yellow wallpapers is a frequently explored theme in literature and the scope of text to explore these is varied. From traumatic events that trigger the recession to pressure to a wider range of non-personal sources, various factors can threaten the character's mind. In general, authors are trying to prove that most of the threats reasoning is a combination of long-term factors and short-term factors - Mervyn Peake's novel "Titus Groan" burning library with a library worried about him I saw it from the weight of tradition
This week I read the short story "Yellow Wallpapers" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. In our course I am reading to compare with The Bell Jar of Sylvia Plath. That guy is a creepy person who highlights abuse of psychiatric patients before it is truly understood. Gilman himself also suffered from depression for a while, but in fact it was said that the best way is to stimulate spirituality, writing, and ultimately not doing anything. What bothers me is that if you have creative thinking, you need to get out of all knowledge that can bypass your mind; it can not be suppressed . I like this story very much, but it makes me very strange!
Treating crazy psychosis and madness with bell jars and yellow wallpapers is a frequently explored theme in literature and the scope of text to explore these is varied. From traumatic events that trigger the recession to pressure to a wider range of non-personal sources, various factors can threaten the character's mind. In general, authors are trying to prove that most of the threats reasoning is a combination of long-term factors and short-term factors - Mervyn Peake's novel "Titus Groan" burning library with a library worried about him I saw it from the weight of tradition