The Yellow Wallpaper
The Yellow Wallpaper
The Yellow Wallpaper
The Yellow Wallpaper is written as a series of diary entries from the perspective
of a woman who is suffering from post-partum depression. The narrator begins by
describing the large, ornate home that she and her husband, John, have rented for the
summer. John is an extremely practical man, a physician, and their move into the
country is partially motivated by his desire to expose his suffering wife to its clean air
and calm life so that she can recover from what he sees as a slight hysterical tendency.
The narrator complains that her husband will not listen to her worries about her
condition, and treats her like a child. She also suspects that there is something strange
and mysterious about the house, which has been empty for some time, but John
dismisses her concerns as a silly fantasy. As part of her cure, the narrator is forbidden
from pursuing any activity other than domestic work, so as not to tax her mind. She
particularly misses the intellectual act of writing and conversation, and this account is
written in a diary that she hides from her husband. They move into the room at the top
of the house, which the narrator supposes is a former nursery since it has barred
windows and peeling yellow wallpaper.
Here, at the story’s climax, the perspective shifts as the narrator’s mental
breakdown becomes complete, and in her madness she is convinced that she is the
woman who was trapped behind the wallpaper. She begins to creep around the room in
an endless circle, smudging the wallpaper in a straight groove. John breaks into the
room and discovers her, and faints at the sight. She continues to creep endlessly
around the room, forced to go over his prone body.