Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Madness and Insanity in A Rose For Emily And The Yellow Wallpaper
Insanity in A Rose For Emily And The Yellow Wallpaper Many of the upper course of instruction women in the Victorian era were assumed to be weaker than men, prone to frailties and female problems and unable to think for themselves, valuable only as marriage bait. The two women in Faulkners and Gilmans stories are victims of such assumptions. Emily in A Rose For Emily and the narrator of The Yellow Wallpaper are driven insane because they feel trap by the men in their lives, and they retreat into their own worlds as an escape from reality, and finally rebel in the only ways they each can find. Emily and antics wife, the woman in The Yellow Wallpaper who is never named, both feel stifled and suppressed by the men in authority over them. Emily, as a slender figure in white... ...he trap that society has placed them in. Works Cited Faulkner, William. A Rose For Emily. The Norton Introduction To Literature. Eds. Jerome Beaty and J. Paul Hunter. 7th Ed. sweet York, Norton, 1998. 1 502-509. Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Yellow Wallpaper. The Norton Introduction To Literature. Eds. Jerome Beaty and J. Paul Hunter. 7th Ed. New York, Norton, 1998. 2 630-642.
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