Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Obsessed With Paper?

The Yellow Wallpaper is a profound story that may seem simply weird and literal, but actually shows the complete mental breakdown of a mostly healthy woman into an entirely other being. The woman, who begins unnamed, is forced to endure the rest cure for her depression. Her isolation in a room where there is absolutely nothing to focus on aside from the wallpaper, is unhealthy for anyone. She begins to realize she has nothing else to live for besides studying the walls; her baby is cared for, her husband works, and she is more of a hazard than help, “It is fortunate Mary is so good with the baby. Such a dear baby! And yet I cannot be with him, it makes me so nervous” (Gilman 3). She knows that she is not a good fit for her own child, leading her to have even less to care for. Her obsession with the yellow wallpaper of her bedroom and lack of social interaction leads her to mentally die; the person she once was disappears for it could endure no more suffering in the same bed at all hours. She becomes a new woman, the one she had been studying so closely in that wallpaper, until she knew nothing else but the yellow paper. For this reason, she thinks she was born in the wallpaper and does everything she can to be free of it which involves her ripping it all off to her husband’s shock. At the very end of the story, the woman she once was is finally named, “’I've got out at last,” said I, " in spite of you and Jane? And I've pulled off most of the paper, so you can't put me back!’” (Gilman 9). Jane was the woman who had been mentally stable through most of the trauma, trying to reason with herself and remain optimistic. Once Jane reaches her breaking point, she dies only to leave her body in the hands of a creeping woman who came from the walls. The woman was able to get out, not only past the paper but also past her own sane self.
            This intense story is mostly relevant in the nineteenth century, for that was when rest cure was very popular but it is still important today for it shows how harmful isolation really can be. Jane’s lack of interaction and exercise led her to have no purpose in life, so instead of physically killing herself, she mentally did so by obsessing over the wallpaper of her room. Anyone, even today, who is constantly alone and bored, whether forced to or not, needs to be aware of the story and how harmful their lack of interaction really is.

Work Cited

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Yellow Wallpaper. N.p., n.d. United States Library of

Medicine. Web. 11 Mar. 2015.

2 comments:

  1. Good Job Nina! I agree that the lack of interaction that Jane had with others caused her mind to deteriorate. It's interesting that you point out that she's more of a hazard than a help because she herself says something along the lines of this and acknowledging that is very painful for anyone. I think that Jane wanted to be optimistic and reasonable throughout the trauma, she even tries to delude herself by giving some of John's actions a non-negative light; however, in actuality she was a bit bitter and sarcastic. Like you said her breaking point is definitely where she completely breaks free of this sad reality and allows the creeping woman to roam free and I believe that some of the creeping woman's influence and possession can be seen even before like here "I always lock the door when I creep by daylight. I can't do it at night, for I know John would suspect something at once. " I find it very insightful that you call the creeping woman's possession the point of her mental death. To die is very serious and by calling her break down a death, it signifies the consequence of isolation, self-schism and abandonment. Overall, keep calm and surge on Toompoost.

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  2. Very insightful post. My favorite bit: "Jane was the woman who had been mentally stable through most of the trauma, trying to reason with herself and remain optimistic. Once Jane reaches her breaking point, she dies only to leave her body in the hands of a creeping woman who came from the walls. The woman was able to get out, not only past the paper but also past her own sane self." I think you do a good job of explaining what may have happened to Jane. It is important to note that she WAS attempting to cope, in spite of her depression and feeling that she had no real role to play. But she may have run out of coping mechanisms with no one to talk to and nothing to do but stare at those walls.

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