“The Yellow Wall Paper” by
Charlotte Perkins Stetson addresses the issue of woman’s inability to confront
and solve issues imposed upon them by a male dominated society, in a productive
and conventional way. Women in this period were denied the means of usual
problem solving, because of their role in society. Men of the period believed women
were weak, prone to flights of fancy, unable to decide what was in their best
interest, and needed a man to direct their life for them.
The work
begins by the Narrator expressing her concern that the house is unusual, and
maybe haunted. Her husband, John, laughs at her and the Narrator says, “one
expects that in marriage.” The narrator is concerned but her husband will not
take her seriously. John believes that he knows what is right.
Like his
belief that the house is okay, John does not believe that there is anything
wrong with his wife’s health. However he has recommended a cure that includes
isolation rest, and no work of any kind. The Narrator wishes to see her family,
and child but John does not think that would be good for her health. John
prescribes scheduled naps, and chastises the Narrator for getting out of bed at
night. The Narrator is dissatisfied with their bedroom but John does not allow
her to change rooms, and attributes her dislike for the room as a fancy, which
she must not indulge.
The room
itself represents the Narrator’s, and women in general, place in society. She
cannot change the room even though she finds its alarming and revolting. The
bed is nailed down, the windows are barred, and the wallpaper forms a prison
for a woman, when viewed in the moonlight. Like the Narrator the woman in the
wallpaper is trapped. The Narrator tries to help her escape, but rather than
the woman escaping out of the wallpaper, The Narrator escapes into it, or
rather into her own head, rejecting the world which has resigned her to a
nominal role.
A man in
this period would not have been forced to accept bed rest as a cure for a
problem that no one believed was really there at all. He would have been taken
seriously, and his opinion would have counted. A man would have had the
opportunity to decide for himself that he is well enough to work, or visit his
family. If a man were unhappy with his room, he would change it. Women were
denied the same paths for seeing their will put into effect. They were something
to be conducted by men, their decisions contingent on the decisions of the man.
The Narrator is denied this options and must resort to a different sort of
problem solving. There is no way to seek change within the system, so she
leaves the system.
Hey,
ReplyDeleteI like your point about the room representing the woman's place in society, I hadn't considered that. Do you think there's anything to be said for her ability to write when no one else is in the room? Maybe it represents her being a capable human unworthy of her oppression? I'm also curious whether or not the bed being nailed down represents anything, as this story seems to be heavy with symbolism. Maybe it just furthers the room being like a prison; I'm not sure about that. I enjoyed reading this though, you've convinced me of your point.