preview

Use Of The Unreliable Narrator In 'The Yellow Wallpaper'

Decent Essays

Charlotte Perkins Gilman used the unreliable first person in the story, “The Yellow Wallpaper”. This was a tough perspective when the narrator sunk into madness. The author used the unreliable first person to convey the story that allowed readers to go along for the ride into madness and cultivated a certain amount of sympathy for the narrator and her condition. When she used the constant word “I” it put the readers right back into her head and the readers empathized with her. In this story, “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the reader was unable to trust the narrator, which brought a new perspective to the audience. The narrator was very absurd in the way she wrote. She lost touch with the outer world. At this point, she was faced with relationships, objects and situations that seem innocent and natural, but in actuality, it was very bizarre. From the beginning, the readers sees that the narrator is imaginative and a highly expressive women. She remembered that she frightened …show more content…

The process of separation had begun, at the very moment she chose to have a secret dairy as “a relief to her mind.” From that point, her true thoughts are hid from the outer world, and the narrator began to slip into madness. Gilman showed the readers that separation in the narrator’s mind had the narrator puzzle over effects in the world that her, herself had caused. The narrator does not know right away that the yellow stain on her clothes and the long “smooch” on the wallpaper were connected (page 8, line 9-10). The narrator fights for the realization that the women in the wallpaper was just a symbolic version of her own situation. When the narrator finally sees herself with the women trapped in the wallpaper, she was able to see the other women and was forced to creep and hide behind the flamboyant patterns of their

Get Access