Charlotte Perkins Gilman

a painting of a woman in a yellow-tinged room standing in a corner with a small book in her hands

Realism and the Weird in “The Yellow Wallpaper” and “The Story We Used to Tell”

When read together, Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s tale reveals the realism peeking behind the frame of Shirley Jackson’s, and Jackson’s short story illuminates the otherworldly horror plaguing the narrator of Perkins Gilman’s.

Fiction Responding to Fiction: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Doris Lessing

Fiction Responding to Fiction: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Doris Lessing

“The Yellow Wallpaper” was published in 1892 by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and remains a staple of early feminist fiction. In 1983, Doris Lessing responded to Perkins Gilman’s classic story with “To Room Nineteen,” in part to point out how little had changed in the lives of women.

Cover of The Yellow Wallpaper
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Violence Against Women in Fiction

Four of us writers were critiquing each other’s novellas which all happened to have female protagonists. Three of the protagonists were victims of sexual assault, which then caused these characters to suddenly and completely change. One of those protagonists became mentally unbalanced and faded away, another was rescued by a man, and the third became…

Try to Become Him

Try to Become Him

One thing I’ve learned teaching in the Cornell Prison Education Program is that a person in prison, more often than not, is someone whose whole life has felt like a long imprisonment. People don’t become prisoners at random. First came the violences of neglect or poverty. Or the glimpses of horror. As children, they were the…