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The Yellow Wallpaper

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About This Book

A woman undergoing a prescribed rest cure is confined with limited stimulation and forbidden to work; confined in an upstairs nursery with a disturbing yellow wallpaper, she becomes increasingly preoccupied with its pattern. Isolated and patronized by her husband, she first studies the paper's chaotic design, then imagines figures moving within it, projecting frustration and agency onto the walls. Her obsession grows into a private investigation and eventual identification with a trapped woman she perceives behind the pattern, culminating in acts that blur the boundary between imagination and breakdown. The narrative explores control, gendered medicine, domestic confinement, and the fragility of sanity.

About the Author

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins portrait

Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Charlotte Perkins Gilman was an influential American writer and social reformer known for her contributions to feminist literature and social criticism. Born in 1860, she is best remembered for her short story "The Yellow Wallpaper," which explores themes of mental health and women's oppression. Gilman's works often advocate for women's rights and challenge traditional gender roles, as seen in her utopian novel "Herland," where she imagines a society composed entirely of women. Throughout her career, she wrote extensively on issues of gender, work, and society, leaving a lasting impact on feminist thought and literature.

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