Yellow wallpaper Resting Therapy The search for rest is used to treat nervous breakdown, but it will work. "Yellow wallpaper" explores the concept of rest therapy and its effectiveness for female patients. The most famous doctor for the treatment of neurasthenia is a highly respected neurologist named Silas Weir Mitchell (Kivo 8). Women from all over the world are traveling to the United States for treatment by Silas Weir Mitchell (5). Resting treatment consists of isolating patients from their families and friends and completing physical and intellectual rest (5).
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.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman experienced a life story similar to the life of The Yellow Wallpaper's narrator. She was assigned the same "resting treatment" as the narrator, after which she brought a mental breakdown. Prescribed "rest treatment" requires minimal interpersonal contact, suppression of imagination, and female restraint. In contrast, you are told that you are crazy, especially if it does not, it may truly empathize someone to become mentally ill. - In her "Yellow wallpaper" of Charlotte Perkins, the hero of the hero, her husband John was taken to the summer house. John is not only her husband, he is also a doctor. Her husband, John, diagnosed his wife mentally uncomfortable. The prescription for treating John's mental instability is rest. While he is absent from bed, the talker is alone in her house for the whole day.
There seems to be no effort to investigate the symptoms of mental illness. For the narrator of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and "The Yellow Wallpaper", the remaining treatment failed. One of the analyzes of this failure is that the rest of the treatment only binds Gilman, her narrator, and all "sick" women to a very obedient and helpless role. Readers who are "yellow wallpaper" can conclude that the rest can only heal '... deepening mental confusion'. 7 This story shows the necessity of women's independence. This story explores women who are crazy for inactivity. But in a broader sense this story is also exploring the struggle between marriage and career, social expectations and personal goals. While reading about Gilman's own life, this story clearly reflects her emotions that it is trapped in marriage.