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Published: 1st March 1996
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The Yellow Wallpaper & Herland (Collins Classics)
By (Author) Charlotte Perkins Gilman
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
6th September 2022
20th January 2022
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Horror and supernatural fiction
Classic science fiction
Short stories
Feminism and feminist theory
813.4
Paperback
384
Width 111mm, Height 178mm, Spine 15mm
130g
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There are things in that wallpaper that nobody knows about but me, or ever will
Hailed as one of the most distinctive and compelling literary voices of her era, Charlotte Perkins Gilman is praised today for her ground-breaking, feminist writing. Collected here, both The Yellow Wallpaper and Herland are extraordinary for scrutinising the patriarchal norms of turn-of-the-century America.
In The Yellow Wallpaper a woman frantically paces the empty nursery at the top of a secluded mansion. Her husband John, a physician, is of no comfort and she cant bear to sit with the new baby as his crying makes her much too nervous. And then theres the putrid, yellow wallpaper which seems to shift and creep around the room before her very eyes
Herland, first published in 1915, follows a group of three men as they arrive in a female-only society. Peace and tranquillity thrive in this utopian land, forcing the explorers to question how their own corrupted, male-dominated world can survive.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (born 1860, Connecticut, U.S.) was a leading American feminist, lecturer, writer and publisher who was at the forefront of the womens movement in the United States. The Yellow Wallpaper, her shortest, but most famous work, remains an important document of nineteenth-century attitudes towards womens mental health. Perkins Gilman died at the age of seventy-five in 1935.