Essay on "Yellow Wallpaper"

Essay 7 pages (2538 words) Sources: 2 Style: MLA

[EXCERPT] . . . .

Yellow Wallpaper

The two stories that are reviewed and analyzed in this paper have common themes with very diverse characters, conflicts and settings. A shared theme being illustrated through the characters, within the settings, and within the conflict, is a sense of human confusion, emotional chaos and certainly, a degree of madness. The theme of imprisonment is evident, too, in very different ways within very dramatically different settings. Characters are being in custody in a sense, locked into a situation from which one can't get out, is part of the conflict that haunts protagonists in these stories.

The differences and contrasts couldn't be more stark: one story places men trudging through slime and shit searching for a dead colleague while battling in a crazy war; the second story places a misdiagnosed woman (battling a phantom illness) in a room that contributes to her mental confusion. And yet, both stories' themes revolve around madness and imprisonment. This paper will present those themes and assert that the fictionalized themes of madness and imprisonment are poignant and yet revealing in the sense of real life situations that happen to real people.

The basis of the review: Meanwhile, a review of each story is presented in terms of why the characters and their settings are metaphors and symbols for madness and incarceration, and the brief review will shed light on what the conflict adds to the reader's consciousness. A narrative will follow involving comparisons between stories in terms of the themes juxtapositions and similarities.

In the Field -- Review of Conflicts and Ironies

In the Field by
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Tim O'Brien builds tension through descriptions of war and the madness of killing and the inutility of wallowing around in a "shit field" (2392). The mind's image of eighteen men wading side by side, ready to be attacked yet heads bowed as they slosh through a hideously unsavory field is numbing and repulsive for a reader who had never been subjected to such repugnant circumstances. O'Brien writes, "…the rains had fallen without stop…and the muck had now risen thigh-deep in the field along the river." There is a great deal of dialogue between the characters in this story that helps pick up the tempo of the dark themes and humanize the characters at the same time.

Here they were, in a living hell, wallowing around not just in muck and rain and death, but metaphorically they were wallowing around in an unwinnable war against the looming madness of it all. They are lost yet locked into a sea of human excrement while searching for one of their own brethren, who is a victim of the unspeakably awful quagmire's stink and ooze.

"In the Field" offers the muck and rain and misery as a metaphor for war. Time and time again the dialogue and the narrative are cloaked in imagery of darkness, uncertainty, and insanity. "The rain was the war and you had to fight it," O'Brien writes (2392). In searching for their dead colleague Kiowa the soldiers were actually lost as far as their identities goes. They were victims in so many ways, being thrust into a jungle war they clearly were not prepared for.

"In his hooded poncho, everything caked with mud, the boy's face was impossible to make out," O'Brien explains (2392). As they searched for Kiowa somewhere beneath that awful field of slop and ooze, "…The filth seemed to erase identities, transforming the men into identical copies of a single soldier…" (2392). Men without faces, men without identities, mud erasing their otherwise solid humanity. O'Brien has created the ubiquitous universal soldier looking for a lost colleague; readers know that lost colleague was brave and that his father taught Sunday school. Led by a Lieutenant Cross, the search goes on though its inevitable ending is already known. Still bodies must be retrieved so the body bag can carry the cadaver home. "Cross" is perhaps being used by O'Brien as a symbol of Christianity, of salvation, of a spiritual power that is now lost in the impossible mud and shit of war -- a strong juxtaposition to the evil of mindless killing in a dark confusing war.

O'Brien's use of dialogue allows the story to be told by the characters who are the bread and butter of the story. The narrator is important and sets the table for the movement of plot and theme, but then the dialogue comes in and brings the main meal for the reader to feast on. This is important in O'Brien's story, because so much has been written about war, from so many authors (Hemingway comes to mind immediately), and even the Vietnam war has been fictionalized numerous times. And so allowing the soldiers to speak for the author, and actually speak for humanity, is an effective tool in this story. The voices represented through the dialogue in this story are the voices of a million soldiers in five thousand wars, and they spend time wondering how they got there and are trying to stay alive in a scene scarred with death and dying.

But while Lieutenant Jimmy Cross is feeling guilty about his lost platoon mate, and wondering what he should say to Kiowa's father, the dialogue allows the reader to get a double dose of irony; all the irony in the world is there for the taking because of the dead colleague and the stinking rising river of human excrement -- and on top of that irony the dialogue makes light of the irony of the situation -- a story within a story, an irony within an irony.

"Wasted in the waste," Azar quips, "A shit field. You got to admit, it's pure world-class irony" (2393). The reason they had to endure this misery -- besides the raw and basic facts of war, you go where you are told to go, even though Vietnamese women ("mamma-sans") had warned the GIs that it was "Evil ground" -- is that the enemy had launched a mortar attack. "The field just exploded. Rain and slop and shrapnel, it all mixed together, and the field seemed to boil" (2395). It was raining water from the sky, and fire from the enemy.

When they actually locate the body of Kiowa, the soldiers continue to complain about the place: "Camps us in a toilet. Man don't know shit," says Sanders (2394). Indeed Kiowa had been killed because of the overflowing river and all the mud and shit. Just like war itself, where there is a river of violence washing in on foot soldiers, never ending and sometimes smelling of death (which is worse than "shit" but still ugly and awful).

Indeed, here they were in the most miserable place in the world led by a First Lieutenant (Cross) who had "never wanted" the responsibility of leading me through a field of shit. "Military matters meant nothing to him…he was unprepared…twenty-four years old and his heart wasn't in it" (2394). The irony of being young and too young to be sent out to die and yet here was Cross, stuck in a killing field where at any moment he could be another statistic.

The Yellow Wallpaper -- Review of Conflicts and Ironies

In "The Yellow Wallpaper" there is sense of madness and conflict surrounding the narrator's mental health. Not unlike the war that Lieutenant Cross is fighting, the protagonist in The Yellow Wallpaper is also in a battle, but of a different kind. She is battling to be believed, battling for her sanity. The narrator's husband and brother are both doctors. Doctors in the 19th Century were like Gods, and their words were considered the bible of medical knowledge. Like the generals and politicians who sent young men off to war, and who had the final word on morality and justice, doctors in the 19th Century were the authority figures and if they happened to be wrong and a patient suffered, few dared question their right to make mistakes.

This is by way of offering some important psychological and historical background into the condition of the narrator. Indeed, the medical condition known as "hysteria" in the 19th Century was a female issue that related to her emotional condition. It was actually a case of doctors not understanding what women were really going through. Carroll Smith-Rosenberg writes in the introduction to The Yellow Wallpaper (p. 90) that "Hysteria as a chronic, dramatic and socially accepted sick role" could lead to some "alleviation of conflict and tension."

Smith-Rosenberg insists that "hysteria" was largely a misdiagnosed situation in which doctors didn't really know what was happening to the female.

The narrator is having a near-constant stream of consciousness interaction with the reader, building up believability and support for her desire to be set free. Within the unquoted monologue the narrator weaves themes that connect the reader to her seemingly balance approach to an unbalanced situation. When dialogue does appear, it is almost shocking to the senses of the reader, and jolts the reader into alertness, looking for… READ MORE

Quoted Instructions for "Yellow Wallpaper" Assignment:

This will be a comparative essay discussing the two short stories "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Gilman and "In The Field" by Tim O'Brian. In assisting me with my research, I would like this paper to focus on the effects and implications of the use of dialogue within both texts. Gilman's story has much interior monologue of her character, and very minimal expressed dialogue. O'Brian's story by contrast has much more of an emphasis on dialogue use. Focus as well on contrasting not just the spoken dialogue, but the unspoken and the unsaid. What effect does this have on the stories themselves, and further what can be gleaned from a broader perspective once (and only once) the comparison between the two stories is made? In other words, why is this comparison important and what does it tell us?

Additionally, you should also consider the question of the psychological as well. Giman's main character is arguably going insane during her prescribed "Rest Cure" from the yellow wallpaper in the room. In O'Brian's story, the soldier who blames himself for Kiowa's death also questions if he is or if he could "lose it" at one point in the story. What can be compared in the two texts with regards to sanity and the psychology of the main characters in each text? Again, what new overlapping message or insight is gleaned by making the comparison and what does it tell us?

In writing this essay be sure to develop an arguable thesis that links these aspects of the two stories together. When structuring the paragraphs, and introducing a quote, use lead in phrases such as "For example," "In addition" and "Furthermore" and follow the quote with commentary on its significance.

* Use standard margins

* Use a minimum of 8 (eight) quotes throughout the paper devoting equal time to each story and idea discussed. You can use more quotes if appropriate.

*If possible (and to keep quotes and evidence consistent) use the versions of the texts that are printed in the Heath Anthologies. ISBN #'s of Heath Anthologies are below.

Gilman 9780618532995 (Volume C)

O'Brian 9780618533015 (Volume E)

Otherwise use resources available and I will find the corresponding quotes in the volumes during my writing.

*Two sources listed above should only be source texts themselves. Do not bring in additional sources other than the two stories discussed.

Any questions on the above, feel free to e-mail.

How to Reference "Yellow Wallpaper" Essay in a Bibliography

Yellow Wallpaper.” A1-TermPaper.com, 2009, https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296. Accessed 28 Sep 2024.

Yellow Wallpaper (2009). Retrieved from https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296
A1-TermPaper.com. (2009). Yellow Wallpaper. [online] Available at: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296 [Accessed 28 Sep, 2024].
”Yellow Wallpaper” 2009. A1-TermPaper.com. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296.
”Yellow Wallpaper” A1-TermPaper.com, Last modified 2024. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296.
[1] ”Yellow Wallpaper”, A1-TermPaper.com, 2009. [Online]. Available: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296. [Accessed: 28-Sep-2024].
1. Yellow Wallpaper [Internet]. A1-TermPaper.com. 2009 [cited 28 September 2024]. Available from: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296
1. Yellow Wallpaper. A1-TermPaper.com. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/yellow-wallpaper-two-stories/47296. Published 2009. Accessed September 28, 2024.

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