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Essays 601 - 630
In five pages Gilman's story and Gardner's novel are compared and contrasted with the focus being upon the protagonist's position ...
that tended to see women in a strictly stereotypical fashion. The following examination of Charlotte Brontes life and her mast...
and fascinates her. The wallpaper is described as having "sprawling flamboyant patterns" that commit "every artistic sin" (13) co...
heroine in that, even as a child, she rejected the concept of defect within herself. Victorians saw feminine defect, i.e. traditio...
Reed childrens nurse, Bessie. After an argument with her cousin John, Jane was cruelly punished by being locked into what was ref...
In five pages, the author's employment of voice, imagery, and gender themes are considered....
In six pages the social treatment of women is examined within the context of this story in an exploration of plot, characterizatio...
In a paper consisting of five pages the ways in which drawings, paintings, and pictures function within the course of the novel in...
In five pages each female character's questions about happiness are contrasted and compared. There are no other sources listed....
assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression -- a slight hyster...
keeping me at a distance; but that until she heard from Bessie, and could discover by her own observation, that I was endeavouring...
upon her every which way she may turn, reminding her that because she is of the female gender and not of the most prominent of soc...
social restrictions she found particularly repugnant. First published in 1816, Emma "criticizes the manners and values of the upp...
have to occupy the nursery with the horrid wallpaper" (161). As befits a woman who is practically a nonentity, the narrator in "...
Jane comments that "the more he bought me, the more my cheek burned with a sense of annoyance and degradation" (Bronte 236). Roche...
well enough to write some thousand words at a stretch. She describes the view from her window quite lucidly, as well as the pretty...
woman likes her surroundings and it is clear that she likes them orderly. A young woman who was not immersed somehow in the idea o...
insanity, as she becomes progressively obsessed with the rooms wallpaper, its "sprawling, flamboyant patterns committing every art...
is rather curious. The term rightsizing is not used very often. Yet, with this concept, the idea is that while Charlotte is cuttin...
A 6 page essay that discusses Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story, "The Yellow Wallpaper," which continues to capture and fasci...
In five pages this paper analyzes this text in terms of the parameters established with regards to finding love and venturing towa...
way of interacting with the world around her. Is this a...
for their efforts as much as their brothers do; they suffer from too rigid a restraint, too absolute a stagnation, precisely as me...
the time who had attended anything remotely resembling one (as Charlotte Bront? herself had), the abuses struck a chord of familia...
combined with his perception of Jane, makes him think a bit more deeply about his character when he tells her to go to the library...
women and have no true knowledge of what life is like in a society with two sexes. These men fall in love, and eventually are kick...
reside," with the house representative or symbolic of the society as a whole (Goloversic). If we picture the house as society we ...
in this depression she begins to see things in this wallpaper, a patterned wallpaper, that essentially symbolizes her sense of ent...
this passage, the narration shifts and it is clear that the reader is experiencing the red room from the perspective of Jane as a ...
to use looks as an anchor. The other thing that Jane is not is greedy. When Edward offers her all kinds of clothes and jewels, she...