The Representation of Women’s Mental Disorder in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper (1892)
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Abstract
During the nineteenth century, American women were regarded as submissive
and weak creatures. Charlotte Perkins Gilman, in her well-known short story The
Yellow Wallpaper (1892), gave an image of women’s struggles at that time. The
purpose of this dissertation is to study the terrible consequences of true
womanhood and male oppression on women's mental health. In addition, it reveals
the serious effects of the "rest cure," the treatment followed to heal women with
mental health disorders at that time, and how it drove the protagonist of “The
Yellow Wallpaper” to madness. All in all, this dissertation demonstrates how
Charlotte Perkins Gilman managed to write despite her illness and the oppression
she was facing, as it emphasizes her fight as a woman and a female writer for her
rights and freedom. This thesis applies the historical approach to analyse women's
status during the Nineteenth century in order to reach the results.