Tuesday 23 July 2013

Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures

Beautiful Wallpapers Biography

Source (Google.com.pk)
"The beautiful Wallpaper" is a 6,000-word short story by the American writer Charlotte Perkins Gilman, first published in January 1892 in The New England Magazine. It is regarded as an important early work of American feminist literature, illustrating attitudes in the 19th century toward women's physical and mental health.
Presented in the first person, the story is a collection of journal entries written by a woman whose physician husband has confined her to the upstairs bedroom of a house he has rented for the summer. She is forbidden from working and has to hide her journal from him, so she can recuperate from what he calls a "temporary nervous depression – a slight hysterical tendency," a diagnosis common to women in that period. The windows of the room are barred, and there is a gate across the top of the stairs, allowing her husband to control her access to the rest of the house.
The story depicts the effect of confinement on the narrator's mental health and her descent into psychosis. With nothing to stimulate her, she becomes obsessed by the pattern and color of the wallpaper. "It is the strangest yellow, that wall-paper! It makes me think of all the yellow things I ever saw – not beautiful ones like buttercups, but old foul, bad yellow things. But there is something else about that paper – the smell! ... The only thing I can think of that it is like is the color of the paper! A yellow smell."
In the end, she imagines there are women creeping around behind the patterns of the wallpaper and comes to believe she is one of them. She locks herself in the room, now the only place she feels safe, refusing to leave when the summer rental is up. "For outside you have to creep on the ground, and everything is green instead of yellow. But here I can creep smoothly on the floor, and my shoulder just fits in that long smooch around the wall, so I cannot lose my way." The story details the unreliable narrator's descent into madness. The antagonist's husband, John, believes that it is in the narrator's best interest to go on a rest cure after the birth of their child.
The family goes to spend the summer at a colonial mansion that has, in the narrator's words, "something queer about it." She is confined to an upstairs room that she assumes was once a nursery, as the windows are barred, the wallpaper has been torn, and the floor is scratched. However, she comes to suspect that another woman was once confined here against her will. The reader is left unsure as to whether the damage she describes in the room is in fact being done by the narrator herself rather than by previous occupants – at one point she bites the wooden bedhead – and the bars may have been placed on the windows by her own husband as a precaution[citation needed].
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Beautiful Wallpapers Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures


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