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    The Yellow Wallpaper and Story of an Hour were both written by women who wanted to show what challenges come with being a women in the 1800’s. The narrators in both of these stories have huge life changing events happen to them that they must deal with. Jane in The Yellow Wallpaper and Mrs. Mallard in Story of an Hour have many similarities and just as many differences. Mrs. Mallard in the Story of an Hour is very different from Jane in The Yellow Wallpaper. Mrs. Mallard is a rational narrator.

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    "The Yellow Wallpaper‚" written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman‚ portrays the life of a nameless narrator who struggles to connect with reality. I have chosen the narrator to analyze because her character is continuously changing throughout the entire story and is very intriguing. In the beginning of the story she seems quite normal; loving of her husband and expressive of her ideas. But‚ as the story progresses the narrator begins to lose her sanity‚ she becomes obsessed with the yellow wallpaper on her

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    The main character in Susanna Kaysen’s‚ "Girl‚ Interrupted" and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s‚ "The Yellow Wallpaper" are similar in the fact that they both were suppressed by male dominants. Be it therapist or physicians who either aided in their mental deformities or created them. They are similar in the sense that they are both restricted to confinement and must endure life under the watchful eye of overseers. However similar their situations may be‚ their responses are different. In the stories

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    Charlotte Perkins Stetson‚ in her short story‚ The Yellow Wallpaper describes an event in which a woman encounters freedom from unraveling yellow wallpaper. Stetson and her husband‚ John‚ “secured ancestral halls for the summer.” Unfortunately‚ she becomes ill and John diagnoses her with “slight hysterical tendency.” Although‚ she wants to have fun and do work‚ her husband forbids her from doing so until she becomes better. Furthermore‚ he picks out one of the rooms in the house‚ so she can rest

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    Hour vs. the Yellow Wallpaper "The Yellow Wallpaper‚" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman‚ and "The Story of an Hour‚" by Kate Chopin‚ are stories written in the late 1800’s. Women in these days were repressed and did not have the freedom to go and do as they pleased. Both stories were also written from a feminist point of view. The women in these stories are similar as well as different in several ways. Kate Chopin ’s "The Story of an Hour" and Charlotte Perkins Gilman ’s "The Yellow Wallpaper" both used

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    The Charlotte Gilman’s short story book‚ “the Yellow Wallpaper‚” is published 1892‚ is the diary of the protagonist‚ Jane. Her husband locks her in the yellow wallpaper room‚ which she does not like. By she is locked in the room‚ her madness is developing‚ even she creates the women‚ and Jane thinks that women is the great women‚ but could not unfold her power because of blockaded in wallpaper. So Jane rips the wallpaper to escape it. In this book‚ it contains many sources of the Gilman’s feminism

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    The Yellow Wallpaper For women of the twentieth century‚ who have more freedom than before and have not experienced the oppressive life that Charlotte Perkins Gilman experienced from 1860 to 1935‚ it is difficult to understand Gilman ’s situation and understand the significance of "The Yellow Wallpaper." Gilman ’s original purpose of writing the story was to gain personal satisfaction if Dr. S. Weir Mitchell might change his treatment after reading the story. More importantly‚ Gilman says in her

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    distinct that individual from others. In the yellow wallpaper by charlotte Perkins Gilman the narrator is suffering from postpartum depression. In the beginning John who is the narrator husband move to a colonial mansion with her just for her own good which is for her to feel better from her depression. In the mansion there is a wallpaper that every time the narrator looks at it‚ she sees a woman stuck in the paint trying to escape from the wallpaper. The narrator is a sympathetic character‚ since

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    decisions made for them. In the Yellow Wallpaper the narrator hated the room she was in‚ and tried numerous to move into a different room but her husband wouldn’t let her. She didn’t have the power to be able to do what she wanted. When the narrator is trying to argue her point about wanting to switch rooms‚ John says "You know this place is doing you good‚" she responds by saying " Then do let us go down stairs‚ there are such pretty rooms." John says that wallpaper is getting the better of her and

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    no knowledge could burst into bountiful amounts on the subject of insanity. In Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s story “The Yellow Wallpaper”‚ the main character goes through an experience that causes her to reach her breaking point from a caged fragile creature to a free animal. Gilman explores the hidden parts of the mind where illusion and reality collide as one by using the wallpaper as both a trigger and curse in allowing the main character reveal her inner self that was locked away from society.

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