Tyer 1 Drew Tyer Jennifer McCune ENGL 131224 February 2005 No Work and No Play Makes Jane a Dull Girl Jane in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” was “touched” as some say long before she was prescribed, and administered the “rest cure” by her husband for her then unknown ailment now called postpartum depression. The boredom and isolation of this cure only allowed her mind to venture farther down a dark and winding corridor of insanity. Jane has recently had a child and is experiencing what we know today as postpartum depression. Back in the 1800’s doctors had no understanding of these symptoms, so they chalked it all up to a temporary nervous depression.
This was cured by a treatment called the “rest cure” popularized by Dr. S. Weir Mitchell. This remedy consisted mainly of isolation and bed rest. We now know that this does nothing to promote a healthy mind or body. But, at the time this was the best-known cure.
As a child Jane had hallucinations, “I used to lie awake as a child and get more entertainment and terror out of blank walls and plain furniture than most children could find in a toy-store.” (Gilman 593).
This sort of behavior is more than just your average child’s rampant imagination. This is truly the sound of someone who is delusional and needs some form of psychological counseling. This overly active quasi delusional behavior followed Jane to adulthood, and was noticed but dismissed as pure silliness by her husband even before the baby came about, .”..
The Essay on Children And Depression Symptoms Time Home
Summary: Symptoms of clinical child depression can vary depending on their age, personality, and home situation. Symptoms are often blamed on physical problems than on depression so the diagnosis is frequently made in the pediatricians office. If one suspects depression they should look for the following symptoms: seems distracted and has trouble concentrating much of the time, is emotionally ...
he says that Tyer 2 with my imaginative power and habit of story-making, a nervous weakness like mine is sure to lead to all manner of excited fancies… .” (Gilman 592) Anytime Jane acted a little bit weird he would just say it was her hyperactive imagination at work again. Little did he know the depths of her problems that were to become evident over the next three months. The demons in her mind first began to attack her psyche about two weeks into her stay at the house. She regressed into her child like mind state once again when confined to her room. Jane begins to obsess upon the wall paper which she finds hideously fascinating.
She stared at it endlessly finding different violent shapes and images, “There is a recurrent spot where the pattern lolls like a broken neck and two bulbous eyes stare you upside down.” (Gilman 593) This is the same sort of behavior she exhibited as a child in her room. The images in the wallpaper just keep getting more intensely twisted as time progresses. She started noticing indistinct figures shifting around the patterns of the wall paper, .”.. I can see a strange, provoking, formless sort of figure that seems to skulk about behind that silly and conspicuous front design… .” (Gilman 593).
Jane soon becomes obsessed upon this image and it this form begins to take shape and takes form as a woman crouching behind the pattern of the wallpaper.
Her neurotically psychotic belief that there is a woman the wallpaper she keeps hidden to herself .”.. of course I never mention it to them anymore- I am too wise… (Gilman 595).
She is beginning to crack on the outside as well when she speaks to her husband she isn’t even able to finish conversations without bursting into tears. He believes that this is yet another symptom of her ailment, and needs further bed rest. The hallucinations become more bizarre, and a paranoid protectiveness over the woman in the wallpaper as she spends the final three weeks in the room.
Thus her treatment pushes her Tyer 3 already fragile and battered mind into the final descent of insanity. She becomes paranoid when her husband looks at the wall paper or when Jane her husband’s sister touches it. She believes they have hidden motives for their actions. The fact of the matter is that they are perplexed with her infatuation with this wallpaper she complains of so much. Yet, she still believes that they are out to discover her secret and she will not allow that to happen. The hallucinations become even more vivid and disturbing.
The Essay on Jane Eyre And Little Women Jane And Jo Comparison
The novels Jane Eyre and Little Women are strikingly similar in many ways, and the characters Jane Eyre and Jo March are almost mirrors of each other. There are many similarities between Jane and Jo, and also some differences, as well. From childhood, although they find themselves in completely different situations, both girls experience many of the same trials in their younger years. Jane is an ...
She sees a streak that encompasses the room as a result of the woman skulking around continuously making it shake; the patterns contorting violently. The patterns soon become bars, the woman has many heads which she tries to stick through. When the woman lunges her neck out to escape she is choked by the bars. The wall is soon adorned with many strangulated heads of the woman.
This is the last straw for Jane, she can take this no more. The disturbing images her mind has concocted due to her treatment has become too much to bare. On the last night of her treatment she completely loses all grasp of sanity. The wallpaper and the woman are moving once again at full tilt and she tears savagely at it.
She is bound and determined to free this woman so that the madness will end. She locks herself in the room, and releases all her psychotic fury upon it. Jane enters into a primal state where she slashes at the wall paper gnaws at the bed, .”.. I got so angry I bit off a little piece at one corner…
.” (Gilman 599).
In doing this she is essentially trying to destroy the jail cell that confines both her and this woman that has haunted her for months. She finally releases the woman, but in doing this Jane’s psyche stops differentiating the woman in the wall paper, and Jane as two separate entities. They are finally brought together as one as they have always been. Jane already had a fragile psyche. As a child and through her adult life she exhibited the traits of a mentally unstable individual.
The “rest cure” coupled with the postpartum depression Tyer 4 she was experiencing merely accelerated the mental flaws she had, and brought about the inevitable. The cure had taken an already frangible mind and thrown it into complete and total disarray. Tyer 5 Works Cited Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Literature: An Introduction to Reading And Writing. 7 th ed. Edgar V.
The Term Paper on The Yellow Wallpaper Gilman Woman Jane
... adds swirling and incoherent thoughts, as well as links Jane to the woman whom she eventually becomes. Gilman certainly uses the word ... the word 'creep'. At the finale, Jane sees creeping women out the window, she sees the woman in the wallpaper creeping, and finally, ... intention of telling him [her improvement] was because of the wall-paper" (258). This sneaky attitude is new to her, as ...
Roberts and Henry E. Jacobs. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall. 2004. 590-600.