SANTANA, M. M.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/0884099573205848; SANTANA, Mayara Marques de.
Resumo:
The objective of this paper is to analyze the representation of women in the short story
The Yellow Wallpaper (1892), by the American writer Charlotte Perkins Gilman, through
the feminist theory and criticism. At a time when women were even more subject to
patriarchal rules, Gilman used her short story as a tool of denunciation and social criticism
against the conditions of female repression and oppression. The short story The Yellow
Wallpaper is considered, by the feminist criticism, a work that deals with the devaluation
of the literary production written by women and the feminine imprisonment before the
medical authority, marriage, and maternity. This study provides an analysis of the power
relations between the heroine protagonist and the other characters in view of the
conditions and behaviors related to the role of women in the patriarchal society. It also
intends to show the incursions of the protagonist as a female subversive figure before an
oppressive reality. It is a bibliographical study and to guide such discussions, the
theoretical support of Woolf (1990), Badinter (1985), Rohden (2001), among others, is
used. The research, finally, recognizes in Gilman's protagonist a transgressive woman of
the social standard of her time, but unable to do otherwise, finds in the madness, the
"liberation" of the bonds of a system that conditions her.