The Yellow
Wall-Paper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wall-Paper is presented as a series of secret journal entries written by an unnamed female narrator suffering from what her physician-husband describes as “temporary nervous depression — a slight hysterical tendency” . The narrative unfolds during a summer retreat in a secluded ancestral mansion rented by her husband, John, who believes complete rest and isolation will cure her condition.
The narrator begins by describing the house as a large colonial mansion, oddly inexpensive and long unoccupied, which immediately evokes in her a sense of unease. Though she jokingly suggests it might be “a haunted house,” she also admits “there is something queer about it” . John dismisses her intuition, and suggests it's a serene place.
John’s medical authority is absolute: he not only diagnoses her condition but controls every aspect of her daily life — her diet, schedule, movement and intellectual activity. She is strictly forbidden to write, Nevertheless, she continues writing secretly, viewing it as a psychological relief.
Against
her wishes, John selects a former nursery at the top of the house as her
bedroom. The room has barred windows, rings fixed into the walls, and a heavy
bed nailed to the floor, suggests the earlier confinement. The most disturbing
feature is the wallpaper.
She reacts with strong emotions to the wallpaper’s color — “a smouldering unclean yellow” — and its chaotic pattern, which seems to “commit suicide” . Though initially repulsed, her enforced confinement causes her attention to fixate obsessively on the wallpaper.
John refuses to remove or replace it, arguing that if the wallpaper were changed, she would find something else to fear next — the bed, the windows, or the stairs — thereby invalidating her lived experience.
As weeks pass, the narrator’s isolation deepens. She is separated from her baby, whom another caretaker tends, because being with the child makes her nervous. This separation intensifies her guilt and sense of inadequacy as a mother. She feels herself becoming “a comparative burden”.
She begins to notice a secondary pattern beneath the wallpaper’s surface, visible only in certain lights. This shadowy sub-pattern gradually takes the shape of “a strange, provoking, formless sort of figure” . Over time, she becomes convinced that a woman is trapped behind the wallpaper, creeping and stooping, struggling to escape.
The narrator’s obsession intensifies. She studies the wallpaper’s behavior under different lighting conditions and concludes that “the paper changes as the light changes” . By moonlight, the wallpaper appears as bars, imprisoning the woman behind them. She realizes with certainty: “the woman behind shakes it!”.
Soon,
the narrator believes there are many women, creeping silently by daylight in
the garden, the lanes, and along the hedges. She identifies with them deeply,
locking herself in her room during the day to creep secretly, stating: “It must
be very humiliating to be caught creeping by daylight!”
The narrator grows suspicious of John and his sister Jennie, believing they are secretly studying the wallpaper. The wallpaper also emits a pervasive odor, which she describes as “a yellow smell” that creeps through the entire house and even clings to her clothes and hair . This sensory hallucination underscores her psychological collapse.
On the final day, with John away overnight, the narrator locks herself in the nursery, throws the key outside, and begins tearing down the wallpaper to free the trapped woman. She exclaims triumphantly that she and the woman work together: “I pulled and she shook” .
She strips the wallpaper from the walls, crawls along the room following a mysterious floor-smudge that matches her shoulder height, and binds herself symbolically with a rope so she cannot be “put back.” She now fully identifies as the woman who has escaped.
When
John finally breaks into the room, he is confronted with the horrifying sight
of his wife creeping endlessly around the room, stepping over his unconscious
body. She declares:
“I’ve got out at last, in spite of you and Jane! And I’ve pulled off most of the paper, so you can’t put me back!”
John
faints, collapsing in her path. Undisturbed, the narrator continues creeping
over him, marking the final, chilling image of complete psychological rupture
and ironic liberation.
I.
Answer the following questions in two or three sentences
1.
Why is the narrator confined to the upstairs room in the mansion?
The
narrator is confined to the upstairs nursery because her husband John, a
physician, believes that complete rest, isolation, and fresh air are necessary
to cure her “temporary nervous depression.” He chooses the room himself,
dismissing her preference for a more pleasant downstairs room, and insists that
she must follow his medical judgment without question.
2.
What does the yellow wallpaper symbolize in the story?
The
yellow wallpaper symbolizes the narrator’s psychological oppression and the
restrictive social roles imposed on women. As the story progresses, it also
comes to represent her repressed self and the condition of women trapped within
patriarchal domestic spaces.
3.
How does the narrator's attitude toward the wallpaper change throughout the
story?
Initially,
the narrator finds the wallpaper merely ugly and irritating, describing its
color and pattern with disgust. Gradually, her attention turns into obsession,
and she begins to see a woman trapped behind it, ultimately identifying herself
with that woman and attempting to tear the wallpaper down.
4.
What role does John, the narrator's husband, play in her mental decline?
John
plays a central role in the narrator’s mental decline by dismissing her
feelings, forbidding her from writing, and enforcing the rest cure without
considering her emotional needs. His patronizing attitude and medical authority
silence her voice and contribute directly to her psychological breakdown.
II.
Answer the following questions in a paragraph
5.
Discuss how the setting of the story contributes to the narrator's mental
breakdown.
The
setting of The Yellow Wall-Paper plays a crucial role in the narrator’s mental
deterioration. The isolated colonial mansion removes her from society and
intellectual stimulation, while the upstairs nursery confines her physically
and psychologically. The barred windows, nailed-down bed, and rings in the
walls suggest imprisonment rather than care. Cut off from creative work and
companionship, the narrator is left alone with her thoughts, which fixate on
the oppressive wallpaper. This claustrophobic environment intensifies her sense
of helplessness and accelerates her descent into madness.
6.
Analyze the narrative style of The Yellow Wall-Paper and its impact on the
reader's understanding of the protagonist's mental state.
The
story is told through a first-person journal format, which allows readers
direct access to the narrator’s thoughts and emotions. The fragmented entries,
shifting tone, and increasing incoherence reflect her deteriorating mental
state. Because the narration is subjective and unreliable, readers experience
the confusion, obsession, and paranoia along with the narrator, making her
psychological collapse immediate and deeply unsettling.
7.
Examine the relationship between the narrator and John.
The
relationship between the narrator and John is marked by imbalance and control.
John treats his wife as a patient rather than an equal partner, dismissing her
opinions and infantilizing her through pet names and condescension. Although he
believes he is acting out of love, his authority as a husband and physician
suppresses her autonomy, making the relationship a central cause of her
emotional isolation and breakdown.
8.
Discuss the symbolism of the wallpaper in relation to the narrator's
psychological state.
The
wallpaper symbolizes the narrator’s entrapment within restrictive social and
domestic roles. As her mental state worsens, she projects her own repression
onto the wallpaper, imagining a woman trapped behind its pattern. The act of
tearing down the wallpaper represents her desperate attempt to free herself
from psychological confinement, even though this liberation occurs through
madness.
III.
Essays
9.
Critically evaluate the representation of mental illness in The Yellow
Wall-Paper. How does Gilman challenge the medical and social treatment of women
during the 19th century?
In
The Yellow Wall-Paper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman presents mental illness not as
an inherent weakness in women, but as a condition worsened—and even created—by
oppressive medical and social practices. The narrator’s “nervous depression” is
treated through the rest cure, which enforces inactivity, isolation, and
silence. Gilman exposes how such treatment denies women intellectual engagement
and self-expression, thereby intensifying their suffering.
Through
John’s character, Gilman critiques the 19th-century medical establishment,
which dismissed women’s emotional experiences as hysteria and relied on rigid
authority rather than empathy. The narrator’s gradual descent into madness is
portrayed as a logical consequence of repression rather than a natural illness.
By showing that enforced rest and obedience destroy rather than heal the
narrator, Gilman powerfully challenges both medical misogyny and societal
attitudes toward women’s mental health.
10.
Explore the theme of confinement in the story, both physical and psychological.
How does the narrator's environment mirror her internal struggle?
Confinement
is a central theme in The Yellow Wall-Paper, operating on both physical and
psychological levels. Physically, the narrator is confined to an upstairs
nursery with barred windows and a nailed-down bed, symbolizing imprisonment.
Psychologically, she is confined by her husband’s authority, medical
prescriptions, and social expectations that deny her autonomy and creativity.
The
oppressive environment mirrors her internal struggle as her thoughts become
increasingly restricted and obsessive. The woman trapped behind the wallpaper
reflects the narrator’s own imprisoned identity. As her environment remains
unchanged and inescapable, her mind fractures, illustrating how external
confinement produces internal collapse.
11.
Discuss The Yellow Wall-Paper as a feminist text. How does it address issues of
identity, autonomy, and resistance within the framework of patriarchal
oppression?
The
Yellow Wall-Paper is a powerful feminist text that exposes the damaging effects
of patriarchal control over women’s bodies and minds. The narrator is denied
identity and autonomy through her roles as wife and patient, while her creative
impulse—writing—is treated as dangerous. John’s authority represents a
patriarchal system that silences women under the guise of protection and
science.
The
narrator’s secret writing and eventual destruction of the wallpaper function as
acts of resistance. Although her rebellion culminates in madness, it also
represents a refusal to remain submissive. Gilman thus highlights the cost of
denying women self-expression and portrays madness as both a protest against
and a product of patriarchal oppression.
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