As people trapped in yellow wallpaper develop more complex social systems, society pays more attention to the birthrate. Over time, maternity is promoted to a "sacred" position. This also applies to Western culture from the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century. Charlotte Perkins Gilman did not agree with the maternity statue that society presented to its members at that time. "You can say that" Yellow wallpaper "reveals women's frustration in culture that seems to make motherhood beautiful while actually downgrading women to nursery prisons." (Bauer 65) In this story In many other social comments included, the use of nursery as a prison of m is symbolically used.
Yellow wallpaper is a female repressive symbol and she believes her duties are limited to her wife and mother. Wallpaper shows signs of female imprisonment. As the wallpaper is always close to her, the narrator begins to analyze the inference behind it. Over time, she began noticing that someone was late ... show more ... Nervous breakdown is a narrator's neurological disorder. Gilman told her that the narrator is sick or she is continuing "rest treatment" treatment would drive her crazy (Wilson). Will Mitchell is a doctor / writer whose doctor / talker who applied "rest treatment" to her but failed. The narrator told her husband to change her treatment by helping her, but he refused her desire. As a result, the narrator is crazy because her husband forces him to put his wife in a suppressed state of health (MacPike)
Repression of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's woman in the yellow wallpaper "Yellow wallpaper" tells women who are often prescribed for hysteria and neurosis due to "neglect of rest and treatment problems" And crazy I was caught up in a story. To a woman. More importantly, the story is to control and attack women's role in society. A narrator of this story is a symbol of all women in the late 19th century and is a prisoner of a closed society. Women are expected to be a short story "Yellow Wallpaper", and Gilman shows a woman suffering from oppression and wishing to control her husband's freedom. The conflict of gender plays an important role throughout the story. The author depicts these conflicts through three main characters, John, Jenny, and a narrator. The theme of this story is a woman who is angry because the treatment of postpartum depression is isolated. Gilman also tells the story of what women are thought of by people.