Charlotte Perkins Gilman
1860-1935
American social activist and writer
"Women are human beings as much as men, by nature; and as women,
are even more sympathetic with human processes. To develop human life in
its true powers we need fully equal citizenship for women."
Introduction
Charlotte Perkins Gilman was a prominent social activist and leading theorist
of the women's movement at the turn of the twentieth century. She examined
the role of women in society and put forth her social theories in Women
and Economics and other nonfiction books, while she developed her feminist
ideals in her novels and short stories. Gilman is best known today for
her short story "The Yellow Wallpaper," in which she portrayed a young
woman's mental breakdown based on her own experience. Believing society
could be changed for the better for women through the use of reason, she
wrote books to advance her ideas.
Family deserted by father
Gilman was born in Hartford, Connecticut on July 3, 1860, to Frederick
Beecher Perkins, a noted librarian and magazine editor, and his wife, Mary
Fitch Perkins. Gilman's father frequently left the family for long periods
during her childhood and he sometimes sent educational books for Gilman
to read. He eventually divorced his wife in 1869. Although Gilman's mother
withheld love to toughen up her children, she would hold them while they
slept and Gilman would remain awake to experience the embrace. During his
absences, Perkins had left his wife and children with his relatives, thus
bringing Gilman into contact with her independent and reform-minded great
aunts — Harriet Beecher Stowe, an abolitionist and author of
Uncle Tom's Cabin; Catherine Beecher, the prominent advocate of
"domestic feminism"; and Isabella Beecher Hooker, an ardent suffragist
(supporter of women's right to vote). But Gilman's primary childhood experience
was a series of frequent moves to try to reduce the family's poverty.
Suffers mental breakdown
Gilman's great aunts and her own mother's self-reliance were influential
in developing her feminist convictions and desire for social reform. Early
in her life Gilman displayed the independence she later advocated for women:
she insisted on payment for her household chores and she paid her mother
room and board while supporting herself as a teacher and commercial artist.
She had no desire for clothes and jewelry, preferring instead to engage
in physical exercise and to read books of philosophy. In 1884, at the age
of 24, she reluctantly married Charles Walter Stetson, who was also an
artist. Following the birth of their daughter Katharine Beecher the next
year, Gilman suffered from severe depression. She consulted the noted neurologist
S. Weir Mitchell, who prescribed his "rest cure" of complete bed rest and
limited intellectual activity. Gilman credited this experience with driving
her "near the borderline of utter mental ruin," so she removed herself
from Mitchell's care. After her health improved during a trip to California
she attributed her emotional problems in part to her marriage and left
her husband.
Writes "feminist manifesto"
In 1888 Gilman moved to Pasadena, California, with her daughter and her
destitute mother. Having no means of support, she turned to writing poetry
and short stories, among them "The Yellow Wallpaper," which has since become
a feminist classic. When Stetson married her best friend, the author Grace
Ellery Channing, Gilman sent Katharine to live with them — an
act that, coupled with the divorce, proved scandalous. In her effort to
find employment Gilman first moved in 1894 to San Francisco, where she
edited feminist publications, assisted in the planning of the California
Women's Congresses of 1894-95, and helped found the Women's Peace Party.
At the 1895 congress she met the social reformer Jane
Addams, who invited her to spend several months at Hull House in Chicago,
Illinois. Gilman then toured the United States and England lecturing on
women's rights and on labor reform. In 1898 she published Women in Economics,
her best-known nonfiction work and "feminist manifesto." In the book Gilman
argued that women's secondary status in society, and especially their economic
dependence on men, is not the result of biological inferiority but rather
of culturally enforced behavior.
Friend does housework
In 1900 she married George Houghton Gilman, a first cousin who was seven
years younger than she, and who was supportive of her intense involvement
in social reform. Her friend, Helen Campbell, moved in to cook and clean
the house — work that Gilman could never do herself. From 1909
through 1916 Gilman published a monthly journal, The Forerunner,
for which she wrote nearly all of the copy that she claimed could fill
28 long books. As a vehicle for advancing social awareness, The Forerunner
has been called her "single greatest achievement." Yet Gilman could never
make it financially profitable. During this period she also wrote essays,
such as Concerning Children (1900), Human Work (1904), and
The Man-Made World (1911), in which she asserted that women should
work outside of the home, fully using their abilities for the benefit of
society and for their own satisfaction. She proposed removing from the
home such duties as cooking, laundry, and child care by arranging households
in clusters of single-family dwellings or multifamily buildings with trained
personnel in charge of these tasks.
Writes novels about ideal societies
In her fiction Gilman portrayed women struggling to achieve self-sufficiency
or adapting to newfound independence. Her short stories frequently provide
models showing women how to change their lives or redesign society, while
her last three books of fiction, Moving and Mountain (1911), Herland
(1915), and With Her in Ourland (1916), are utopian novels showing
societies in which attitudes toward women and their abilities have radically
changed. Critics find that despite her shortcomings as a fiction writer,
Gilman used satire well in Herland. The novel challenges accepted
images of women by describing the reactions of three American males who
enter Herland, an all-female society which reproduces through parthenogenesis,
reproduction by the development of an unfertilized ovum, as in certain
insects and algae.
Leaves legacy for women
In 1935, after learning that she suffered from inoperable cancer, Gilman
took her own life. She wrote in a final note that "when one is assured
of unavoidable and imminent death, it is the simplest of human rights to
choose a quick and easy death in place of a slow and horrible one." She
died on August 17, 1935, in Pasadena, California, at the age of 75. With
the changes in American society since World War I (1914-1918), Gilman's
economic theories have appeared less radical and have therefore attracted
less notice. However, as women's roles continue to evolve, her studies
on society and her suggestions for nontraditional housekeeping and child
care arrangements gain in significance. Many modern feminist nonfiction
works reflect Gilman's, and readers are rediscovering that her ideas are
relevant to contemporary problems.
"THE YELLOW WALLPAPER"
The short story "The Yellow Wallpaper" is considered Gilman's best work
of fiction and is also her least typical. Rather than an optimistic vision
of what women can achieve, the story is a first-person account of a young
mother's mental deterioration, based on Gilman's own experiences. Although
early reviewers interpreted "The Yellow Wallpaper" as either a horror story
or a case study in mental illness, most critics today see it as a feminist
indictment of society's subjugation of women and praise its compelling
characterization, complex symbolism, and thematic depth.
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