A Companion to the American Short Story

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A Companion to the American Short Story Page 46

by Alfred Bendixen

stories, questioning the traditional gender roles of wife and mother, of which the

  former ’ s “ The Yellow Wallpaper ” (1892) and the latter ’ s “ The Story of an Hour ”

  (1894) are highly representative. 32

  Over the past several decades, Gilman ’ s text has become one of the most well -

  known, widely taught short stories of the period. This much interpreted semi

  -

  autobiographical story about a woman suffering through S. Weir Mitchell ’ s “ rest cure ”

  under the doubly patriarchal supervision of her physician - husband John (and with the

  agreement of her brother, also a doctor), was intended to save women from being

  driven crazy, which it apparently did, according to Gilman ’ s “ Why I Wrote ‘ The

  Yellow Wallpaper

  ’

  ”

  (1913)

  . The narrator indicts her husband and Mitchell, by

  writing “ John is a physician, and perhaps – … perhaps that is one reason I do not get

  well faster ” ( “ Wallpaper ” 31). The story condemns not merely Mitchell ’ s misogynist

  cure, which prohibited women from writing and from thinking deeply, but also a

  society whose broader concept of women ’ s role quashes what Gilman, in the story, as

  well as in her highly infl uential Women and Economics (1898) suggests is a fundamental

  human need, “ the creative impulse, the desire to make, to express the inner thought

  in outer form … ‘ I want to mark! ’ cries the child ” ( W & E 116 – 17). The narrator is

  infantilized and dehumanized by the strictures put on her mental and physical activ-

  ity. Locked in a nursery with barred windows and a bed bolted to the fl oor much of

  the time, with a “ schedule prescription for each hour in the day ” ( “ Wallpaper ” 33),

  she eventually crawls around the room (like a baby), obsessed with the room ’ s wall-

  paper, which she sees imprisoning and even strangling women. Her captivity, and

  the repression of her humanity and creativity, eventually drive her mad. Gilman shows

  us that her only path to freedom from patriarchal oppression, other than suicide, which

  she also contemplates – “ to jump out the window would be admirable exercise ” (46)

  – is to go mad, a Pyrrhic victory highlighted by John ’ s fainting spell upon seeing her

  crawling around the room: “ Now why should that man have fainted? But he did, and

  right across my path … so that I had to creep over him every time! ” (47). In addition

  to rejecting second - class status for women, Gilman also uses the story, along with

  several of her non - fi ction works (see p. 193, above) to suggest the radical idea that

  not all women are suited to be mothers: “ It is fortunate Mary is so good with the

  baby. Such a dear baby! And yet I cannot be with him, it makes me so nervous ” (34).

  Gilman wants women to be free to create intellectually, not just biologically. More

  than just a text of mental hygiene reform, “ The Yellow Wallpaper ” represents an

  effort to show Gilman ’ s audience the extremely urgent need for radical reform of

  traditional gender roles.

  Chopin, like Gilman, sees signifi cant problems with society ’ s traditional construc-

  tions of woman as wife and mother. While she is best known for The Awakening

  (1899), in the years prior to its publication she focused primarily on short fi ction. In

  “ The Story of an Hour, ” fi rst published in Vogue as “ The Dream of an Hour ” (1894) ,

  Mrs. Mallard, the protagonist, at fi rst reacts to the news of her husband ’ s sudden death

  with terrible grief, followed by exhaustion. Soon, however, she feels something coming

  Short Fiction and Social Change

  207

  into her consciousness, and begins to whisper “ ‘ free, free, free! ’ ” after which, in place

  of her former “ repression ” (138), she begins to feel gloriously alive: “ Her pulses beat

  fast, and the coursing blood warmed and relaxed every inch of her body ” (138). What

  follows is a manifesto of female independence: “ she saw … a long procession of years

  to come that would belong to her absolutely … she would live for herself. There

  would be no powerful will bending hers ” (138). Although there is no question that

  she loves her husband – what could love, “ the unsolved mystery, count for in face of

  this possession of self - assertion which she suddenly recognized as the strongest impulse

  of her being! … ‘ Free! Body and soul free! ’ She kept whispering ” (138 – 9) – it is plain

  that married life has stifl ed her, transforming her into a slave. Subsequently, she

  murmurs “ a quick prayer that life might be long. It was only yesterday she had

  thought with a shudder that life might be long ” (139) (clearly the concerns of Seneca

  Falls have not yet been addressed, despite the passing of half a century). Chopin

  implies that death might be better than marriage, at least from a wife ’ s perspective.

  Tragically, however, Mrs. Mallard ’ s freedom is short - lived; she goes downstairs,

  only to encounter her husband, who had been far from the accident, as it turns out.

  Seeing him, she lets out a “ piercing cry ” and falls dead. Chopin, having told her story

  in mostly unironic manner up to this point, concludes it with a savage inversion:

  “ When the doctors came they said she had died of heart disease – of joy that kills ”

  (139). Of course, the truth is, she has died of a broken heart, having lost the intoxi-

  cating freedom she had so briefl y enjoyed. Chopin and Gilman reject the domestic,

  both as trope and social structure, using anti - domestic themes to drive home to their

  readers the injustice and inhumanity of fi n - de - si è cle women ’ s roles.

  Although not all writers discussed here would agree with Jack London ’ s claim that

  “ socialism was the only way out for art and the artist ” (Charmian London 528), they

  would agree that the short story can be an effective weapon with which to impel the

  nation in the direction of social justice. From temperance and workers ’ rights fi ction

  to stories of Native American resistance and Euro - American exploitation, American

  writers in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, utilizing tropes of both

  domesticity and violent confl ict, found short fi ction a highly congenial genre for

  expressing their desire for change.

  Notes

  1

  See Frank Luther Mott, A History of American

  2

  See Mott, A History of American Magazines:

  Magazines: 1741 – 1850 , 341 – 2, and Mott, A

  1885 – 1905

  , 11

  –

  12. According to Mott,

  History of American Magazines: 1850

  –

  1865 ,

  including failed publications, mergers, etc.,

  4 – 5. According to Mott, as many as 5,000

  nearly 11,000 magazines were published

  magazines were active in this period. He

  during this period.

  quotes the

  Illinois Monthly Magazine 1.302

  3

  This chapter is designed to present a broad

  (April 1831), as proclaiming that “ this is the

  overview of the short fi ction of social change

  golden age of periodicals ” (qtd. in Mott, A

  between 1820 and 1918. For extended deep

&n
bsp; History : 1741 – 1850 , 341).

  analysis of the stories noted here, the reader

  208

  Andrew J. Furer

  will need to look elsewhere. (See “ References

  novels, rather than short stories, as the post -

  and Further Reading ” below, for some useful

  1880 works excerpted in Mattingly ’ s anthol-

  critical works and collections.)

  ogy indicate. One possible reason for this was

  4

  In fi ction, however, women appear to pre-

  the decreasing number of temperance gift

  dominate, as a casual survey of temperance

  books and temperance magazines being pub-

  magazines and gift books reveals. Interest-

  lished. According to Frank Luther Mott,

  ingly, among the men who did produce such

  most of the latter survived only a few years,

  work was Walt Whitman, albeit in long

  and only two major ones survived more than

  form, not surprisingly – a novel, rather than

  a decade past the Civil War (Mott, A History

  short stories. In 1842, he published Franklin

  of American Magazines: 1850

  –

  1865 , 210);

  Evans, or The Inebriate: A Tale of the Times,

  meanwhile, relatively few new ones were

  which seems to have sold as many as 20,000

  started in the later era.

  copies (Whitman, Franklin Evans , ed. Casti-

  7

  As Mattingly notes, older women led the

  glia and Hendler xiii). According to Mark

  temperance crusade in public, as well as at

  Walhout, later in life, Whitman liked to joke

  home; here, Alcott suggests a way in which

  about his novel. He told Horace Traubel that

  young women and girls could add their voices

  he had written the novel for money “ ‘ with

  to the crusade, albeit in a more domestically

  the help of a bottle of port or what not.

  ’

  restricted manner. The

  “

  Silver Pitchers

  ”

  Another version had Whitman penning the

  society is a local, informal one; Alcott thus

  novel in Tammany Hall with the help of gin

  implies that the proliferation of independent,

  cocktails from the nearby Pewter Mug

  ”

  small

  -

  scale informal groups of younger

  (Walhout 39). Such tales, however, according

  women would be a useful supplement to

  to Walhout, are not credible. Apparently,

  large - scale organizations such as the WCTU,

  Whitman both preached and practiced tem-

  run by adult women.

  perance throughout his life. As a journalist,

  8

  Garrison refers to her as early as 1829 as “ the

  for example, he reported positively on Tem-

  fi rst woman of the republic ” (qtd. in Karcher,

  perance events in New York. He also com-

  ed., A Lydia Maria Child Reader 1).

  posed an unfi nished sequel to Franklin Evans

  9

  See, for example, her story “ Willie Wharton ”

  called The Madman (Walhout 39).

  ( Atlantic Monthly 11 [March 1863 ]: 324 – 45),

  5

  Because temperance fi ction is not widely

  reprinted in Karcher, ed.,

  A Lydia Maria

  known today, we will examine multiple texts

  Child Reader.

  here. Concerning Sargent, see Mattingly, ed.,

  10

  “ Charity Bowery ” (1839) , while supposedly

  Water Drops from Women Writers: A Temperance

  an interview, according to the author, shows

  Reader

  (17 n.6). According to Mattingly,

  parallel themes. It relates the life story of a

  women temperance writers were able to be

  slave woman, a narrative that effectively dem-

  more open about their dissatisfaction with

  onstrates that even the kindest of slaveowners

  “ woman ’ s place ” than many other writers of

  cannot ultimately diminish the horrors of

  the time. They addressed topics which other

  slavery. Charity has such a master, but after

  fi ction writers, and even male temperance

  his death, she is inherited by her mistress, “ a

  writers, dared not, “ not only general equality

  divil!

  ”

  This woman proceeds to sell away

  between the sexes and violence against

  Charity ’ s children, one by one, something her

  women but also prejudicial societal attitudes

  master had promised never to do. These sales

  towards victims of male assault and abuse, a

  occur even though Mrs. McKinley, the mis-

  woman ’ s right to her own body, marital infi -

  tress, knows that Charity is doing outside

  delity, and the imperative for women to focus

  work to save up to buy her children back.

  on their own needs ” (5).

  Indeed, her mistress repeatedly turns down

  6

  Later temperance fi ction, published by writers

  Charity ’ s offers, even when the latter is able

  including Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Frances

  to pay “ market value. ”

  Ellen Watkins Harper, and Marietta Holley,

  11

  See, for example, Angelina Grimk é , An

  well into the late nineteenth and early twen-

  Appeal to the Christian Women of the South

  tieth centuries, increasingly took the form of

  (1836) .

  Short Fiction and Social Change

  209

  12

  The passage continues, “ or at least is incorpo-

  and accordingly all experience hath shown

  rated and consolidated into that of her

  that mankind are more disposed to suffer

  husband under whose wing, protection, and

  while evils are sufferable, than to right them-

  cover she performs everything; and is therefore

  selves by abolishing the forms to which they

  called … a feme - covert . ” One partial exception

  are accustomed. But when a long train of

  was Mississippi after 1839, when the state

  abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably

  granted women the right to hold property in

  the same object, evinces a design to reduce

  their own name, although only with their

  them under absolute despotism, it is their

  husbands ’ permission. As time passed, other

  duty to throw off such government, and to

  states slowly began to modernize these laws;

  provide new guards for their future security.

  in 1848, New York passed a Married

  Such has been the patient sufferance of the

  Woman ’ s Property Act that gave wives some

  women under this government, and such is

  control of their property

  –

  by the 1860s,

  now the necessity which constrains them to

  nearly a dozen additional states had passed

  demand the equal station to which they are

  similar legislation.

  entitled. The history of mankind is a history

  13

  An interesting minor reform convergence
<
br />   of repeated injuries and usurpations on the

  connects temperance activism and women

  ’ s

  part of man toward woman, having in direct

  rights in the person of Amelia Bloomer, who

  object the establishment of an absolute

  was both the editor of the temperance maga-

  tyranny over her. To prove this, let facts be

  zine The Lily and one of the major American

  submitted to a candid world. He has never

  proponents of “ rational dress ” for women.

  permitted her to exercise her inalienable

  14

  “ The Declaration of Sentiments ” (1848) is

  right to the elective franchise. He has com-

  quite a radical document, even by twenty

  -

  pelled her to submit to laws, in the formation

  fi rst - century standards: “ When, in the course

  of which she had no voice. He has withheld

  of human events, it becomes necessary for one

  from her rights which are given to the most

  portion of the family of man to assume

  ignorant and degraded men – both natives

  among the people of the earth a position dif-

  and foreigners. Having deprived her of this

  ferent from that which they have hitherto

  fi rst right of a citizen, the elective franchise,

  occupied, but one to which the laws of nature

  thereby leaving her without representation in

  and of nature ’ s God entitle them, a decent

  the halls of legislation, he has oppressed her

  respect to the opinions of mankind requires

  on all sides. He has made her, if married, in

  that they should declare the causes that

  the eye of the law, civilly dead. He has taken

  impel them to such a course. We hold these

  from her all right in property, even to the

  truths to be self

  -

  evident: that all men and

  wages she earns. He has made her, morally,

  women are created equal; that they are

  an irresponsible being, as she can commit

  endowed by their Creator with certain

  many crimes with impunity, provided they

  inalienable rights; that among these are life,

  be done in the presence of her husband. In

  liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to

  the covenant of marriage, she is compelled to

  secure these rights governments are insti-

  promise obedience to her husband, he becom-

  tuted, deriving their just powers from the

  ing, to all intents and purposes, her master

 

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