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The short story of The Yellow Wallpaper, by Gilman Charlotte Perkins has in it the symbolic meaning of an obvious personification drawn by the unnamed-narrator’s conclusion as “repellent, almost revolting; a smouldering unclean yellow, strangely faded by the slow-turning sunlight. ... She gives the wallpaper sort of an untidy, strange, and ill type of characterization. ... Throughout the course of the story, the narrator believes that at first she is extremely horrified of the yellow wallpaper and that was resulting in her being continuously sick. ... He obviously neglects to realize that his wife’s wellness is based on the wholeness and the being of her stay near the ‘yellow wallpaper’, as she had described it to appear to be a woman trying to emerge as well as herself. ... Since she lacks this and she is still alone with the battle, she becomes obsessed and emotionally attached to the many different ‘patterns’ of the wallpaper. In a way, she sets herself to constantly observe, thoroughly examine, and make absurd conclusions about the wallpaper. She tends to make up stories from what she sees on the wallpaper. ...
There also comes a point and time where she tears off the wallpaper with her hands first and after her teeth.
Approximate Word count = 991 Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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