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Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Charlotte Perkins Gilman (/ˈɡɪlmən/; née Perkins; July 3, 1860 – August 17, 1935), also known by her first married name Charlotte Perkins Stetson, was an American humanist, novelist, writer, lecturer, advocate for social reform, and eugenicist.[1] She was a utopian feminist and served as a role model for future generations of feminists because of her unorthodox concepts and lifestyle. She has been inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.[2] Her best remembered work today is her semi-autobiographical short story "The Yellow Wallpaper", which she wrote after a severe bout of postpartum psychosis.

Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Born(1860-07-03)July 3, 1860
Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.
DiedAugust 17, 1935(1935-08-17) (aged 75)
Pasadena, California, U.S.
Occupation
Notable works"The Yellow Wallpaper"
Herland
Women and Economics
Spouse
(m. 1884; div. 1894)
Houghton Gilman
(m. 1900; died 1934)
Children1
Signature

Early life edit

Gilman was born on July 3, 1860, in Hartford, Connecticut, to Mary Perkins (formerly Mary Fitch Westcott) and Frederic Beecher Perkins. She had only one brother, Thomas Adie, who was fourteen months older, because a physician advised Mary Perkins that she might die if she bore other children. During Charlotte's infancy, her father moved out and abandoned his wife and children, and the remainder of her childhood was spent in poverty.[1]

Since their mother was unable to support the family on her own, the Perkinses were often in the presence of her father's aunts, namely Isabella Beecher Hooker, a suffragist; Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin; and Catharine Beecher, educationalist.

Her schooling was erratic: she attended seven different schools, for a cumulative total of just four years, ending when she was fifteen. Her mother was not affectionate with her children. To keep them from getting hurt as she had been, she forbade her children from making strong friendships or reading fiction. In her autobiography, The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Gilman wrote that her mother showed affection only when she thought her young daughter was asleep.[3] Although she lived a childhood of isolated, impoverished loneliness, she unknowingly prepared herself for the life that lay ahead by frequently visiting the public library and studying ancient civilizations on her own. Additionally, her father's love for literature influenced her, and years later he contacted her with a list of books he felt would be worthwhile for her to read.[4]

Much of Gilman's youth was spent in Providence, Rhode Island. What friends she had were mainly male, and she was unashamed, for her time, to call herself a "tomboy".[5]

Her natural intelligence and breadth of knowledge always impressed her teachers, who were nonetheless disappointed in her because she was a poor student.[6] Her favorite subject was "natural philosophy", especially what later would become known as physics. In 1878, the eighteen-year-old enrolled in classes at the Rhode Island School of Design with the monetary help of her absent father,[7] and subsequently supported herself as an artist of trade cards. She was a tutor, and encouraged others to expand their artistic creativity.[8] She was also a painter.

During her time at the Rhode Island School of Design, Gilman met Martha Luther in about 1879[9] and was believed to be in a romantic relationship with Luther. Gilman described the close relationship she had with Luther in her autobiography:

We were closely together, increasingly happy together, for four of those long years of girlhood. She was nearer and dearer than any one up to that time. This was love, but not sex ... With Martha I knew perfect happiness ... We were not only extremely fond of each other, but we had fun together, deliciously ...

— Charlotte P. Gilman, The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1935)

Letters between the two women chronicles their lives from 1883 to 1889 and contains over 50 letters, including correspondence, illustrations and manuscripts.[10] They pursued their relationship until Luther called it off in order to marry a man in 1881. Gilman was devastated and detested romance and love until she met her first husband.[9]

Adulthood edit

In 1884, she married the artist Charles Walter Stetson, after initially declining his proposal because a gut feeling told her it was not the right thing for her.[11] Their only child, Katharine Beecher Stetson (1885–1979),[12] was born the following year on March 23, 1885. Charlotte Perkins Gilman suffered a very serious bout of post-partum depression. This was an age in which women were seen as "hysterical" and "nervous" beings; thus, when a woman claimed to be seriously ill after giving birth, her claims were sometimes dismissed.[13]

 
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Photograph by Frances Benjamin Johnston (c. 1900)

Gilman moved to Southern California with her daughter Katherine and lived with friend Grace Ellery Channing. In 1888, Charlotte separated from her husband – a rare occurrence in the late nineteenth century. They officially divorced in 1894. After their divorce, Stetson married Channing.[14][15] During the year she left her husband, Charlotte met Adeline Knapp, called "Delle". Cynthia J. Davis describes how the two women had a serious relationship. She writes that Gilman "believed that in Delle she had found a way to combine loving and living, and that with a woman as life mate she might more easily uphold that combination than she would in a conventional heterosexual marriage." The relationship ultimately came to an end.[16][17] Following the separation from her husband, Charlotte moved with her daughter to Pasadena, California, where she became active in several feminist and reformist organizations such as the Pacific Coast Women's Press Association, the Woman's Alliance, the Economic Club, the Ebell Society (named after Adrian John Ebell), the Parents Association, and the State Council of Women, in addition to writing and editing the Bulletin, a journal put out by one of the earlier-mentioned organizations.[18]

In 1894, Gilman sent her daughter east to live with her former husband and his second wife, her friend Grace Ellery Channing. Gilman reported in her memoir that she was happy for the couple, since Katharine's "second mother was fully as good as the first, [and perhaps] better in some ways."[19] Gilman also held progressive views about paternal rights and acknowledged that her ex-husband "had a right to some of [Katharine's] society" and that Katharine "had a right to know and love her father."[20]

After her mother died in 1893, Gilman decided to move back east for the first time in eight years. She contacted Houghton Gilman, her first cousin, whom she had not seen in roughly fifteen years, who was a Wall Street attorney. They began spending a significant amount of time together almost immediately and became romantically involved. While she would go on lecture tours, Houghton and Charlotte would exchange letters and spend as much time as they could together before she left. In her diaries, she describes him as being "pleasurable" and it is clear that she was deeply interested in him.[21] From their wedding in 1900 until 1922, they lived in New York City. Their marriage was nothing like her first one. In 1922, Gilman moved from New York to Houghton's old homestead in Norwich, Connecticut. Following Houghton's sudden death from a cerebral hemorrhage in 1934, Gilman moved back to Pasadena, California, where her daughter lived.[22]

In January 1932, Gilman was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer.[23] An advocate of euthanasia for the terminally ill, Gilman died by suicide on August 17, 1935, by taking an overdose of chloroform. In both her autobiography and suicide note, she wrote that she "chose chloroform over cancer" and she died quickly and quietly.[22]

Career edit

At one point, Gilman supported herself by selling soap door to door. After moving to Pasadena, Gilman became active in organizing social reform movements. As a delegate, she represented California in 1896 at both the National American Woman Suffrage Association convention in Washington, D.C., and the International Socialist and Labor Congress in London.[24] In 1890, she was introduced to Nationalist Clubs movement which worked to "end capitalism's greed and distinctions between classes while promoting a peaceful, ethical, and truly progressive human race." Published in the Nationalist magazine, her poem "Similar Cases" was a satirical review of people who resisted social change, and she received positive feedback from critics for it. Throughout that same year, 1890, she became inspired enough to write fifteen essays, poems, a novella, and the short story The Yellow Wallpaper. Her career was launched when she began lecturing on Nationalism and gained the public's eye with her first volume of poetry, In This Our World, published in 1893.[25] As a successful lecturer who relied on giving speeches as a source of income, her fame grew along with her social circle of similar-minded activists and writers of the feminist movement.

"The Yellow Wallpaper" edit

 
The Yellow Wallpaper, one of Gilman's most popular works, originally published in 1892, before her marriage to George Houghton Gilman.

In 1890, Gilman wrote her short story "The Yellow Wallpaper",[26] which is now the all-time best selling book of the Feminist Press.[27] She wrote it on June 6 and 7, 1890, in her home of Pasadena, and it was printed a year and a half later in the January 1892 issue of The New England Magazine.[1] Since its original printing, it has been anthologized in numerous collections of women's literature, American literature, and textbooks,[28] though not always in its original form. For instance, many textbooks omit the phrase "in marriage" from a very important line in the beginning of story: "John laughs at me, of course, but one expects that in marriage." The reason for this omission is a mystery, as Gilman's views on marriage are made clear throughout the story.

The story is about a woman who suffers from mental illness after three months of being closeted in a room by her husband for the sake of her health. She becomes obsessed with the room's revolting yellow wallpaper. Gilman wrote this story to change people's minds about the role of women in society, illustrating how women's lack of autonomy is detrimental to their mental, emotional, and even physical wellbeing. This story was inspired by her treatment from her first husband.[29] The narrator in the story must do as her husband (who is also her doctor) demands, although the treatment he prescribes contrasts directly with what she truly needs—mental stimulation and the freedom to escape the monotony of the room to which she is confined. "The Yellow Wallpaper" was essentially a response to the doctor (Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell) who had tried to cure her of her depression through a "rest cure". She sent him a copy of the story.[30]

Other notable works edit

 
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (pictured) wrote these articles about feminism for the Atlanta Constitution, published on December 10, 1916.

Gilman's first book was Art Gems for the Home and Fireside (1888); however, it was her first volume of poetry, In This Our World (1893), a collection of satirical poems, that first brought her recognition. During the next two decades she gained much of her fame with lectures on women's issues, ethics, labor, human rights, and social reform.[1] Her lecture tours took her across the United States.[1] She often referred to these themes in her fiction.[22]

In 1894–95 Gilman served as editor of the magazine The Impress, a literary weekly that was published by the Pacific Coast Women's Press Association (formerly the Bulletin). For the twenty weeks the magazine was printed, she was consumed in the satisfying accomplishment of contributing its poems, editorials, and other articles. The short-lived paper's printing came to an end as a result of a social bias against her lifestyle which included being an unconventional mother and a woman who had divorced a man.[31] After a four-month-long lecture tour that ended in April 1897, Gilman began to think more deeply about sexual relationships and economics in American life, eventually completing the first draft of Women and Economics (1898). This book discussed the role of women in the home, arguing for changes in the practices of child-raising and housekeeping to alleviate pressures from women and potentially allow them to expand their work to the public sphere.[32] The book was published in the following year and propelled Gilman into the international spotlight.[33] In 1903, she addressed the International Congress of Women in Berlin. The next year, she toured in England, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, and Hungary.

In 1903 she wrote one of her most critically acclaimed books, The Home: Its Work and Influence, which expanded upon Women and Economics, proposing that women are oppressed in their home and that the environment in which they live needs to be modified in order to be healthy for their mental states. In between traveling and writing, her career as a literary figure was secured.[34] From 1909 to 1916 Gilman single-handedly wrote and edited her own magazine, The Forerunner, in which much of her fiction appeared. By presenting material in her magazine that would "stimulate thought", "arouse hope, courage and impatience", and "express ideas which need a special medium", she aimed to go against the mainstream media which was overly sensational.[35] Over seven years and two months the magazine produced eighty-six issues, each twenty eight pages long. The magazine had nearly 1,500 subscribers and featured such serialized works as "What Diantha Did" (1910), The Crux (1911), Moving the Mountain (1911), and Herland. The Forerunner has been cited as being "perhaps the greatest literary accomplishment of her long career".[36] After its seven years, she wrote hundreds of articles that were submitted to the Louisville Herald, The Baltimore Sun, and the Buffalo Evening News. Her autobiography, The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, which she began to write in 1925, appeared posthumously in 1935.[37]

Rest cure treatment edit

Perkins-Gilman married Charles Stetson in 1884, and less than a year later gave birth to their daughter Katharine. Already susceptible to depression, her symptoms were exacerbated by marriage and motherhood. A good proportion of her diary entries from the time she gave birth to her daughter until several years later describe the oncoming depression that she was to face.[38]

On April 18, 1887, Gilman wrote in her diary that she was very sick with "some brain disease" which brought suffering that cannot be felt by anybody else, to the point that her "mind has given way".[39] To begin, the patient could not even leave her bed, read, write, sew, talk, or feed herself.[40]

After nine weeks, Gilman was sent home with Mitchell's instructions, "Live as domestic a life as possible. Have your child with you all the time ... Lie down an hour after each meal. Have but two hours' intellectual life a day. And never touch pen, brush or pencil as long as you live." She tried for a few months to follow Mitchell's advice, but her depression deepened, and Gilman came perilously close to a full emotional collapse.[41] Her remaining sanity was on the line and she began to display suicidal behavior that involved talk of pistols and chloroform, as recorded in her husband's diaries. By early summer the couple had decided that a divorce was necessary for her to regain sanity without affecting the lives of her husband and daughter.[15]

During the summer of 1888, Charlotte and Katharine spent time in Bristol, Rhode Island, away from Walter, and it was there where her depression began to lift. She writes of herself noticing positive changes in her attitude. She returned to Providence in September. She sold property that had been left to her in Connecticut, and went with a friend, Grace Channing, to Pasadena where the recovery of her depression can be seen through the transformation of her intellectual life.[20]

Social views and theories edit

Reform Darwinism and the role of women in society edit

Gilman called herself a humanist and believed the domestic environment oppressed women through the patriarchal beliefs upheld by society.[42] Gilman embraced the theory of reform Darwinism and argued that Darwin's theories of evolution presented only the male as the given in the process of human evolution, thus overlooking the origins of the female brain in society that rationally chose the best suited mate that they could find.

Gilman argued that male aggressiveness and maternal roles for women were artificial and no longer necessary for survival in post-prehistoric times. She wrote, "There is no female mind. The brain is not an organ of sex. Might as well speak of a female liver."[43]

Her main argument was that sex and domestic economics went hand in hand; for a woman to survive, she was reliant on her sexual assets to please her husband so that he would financially support his family. From childhood, young girls are forced into a social constraint that prepares them for motherhood by the toys that are marketed to them and the clothes designed for them. She argued that there should be no difference in the clothes that little girls and boys wear, the toys they play with, or the activities they do, and described tomboys as perfect humans who ran around and used their bodies freely and healthily.[44]

Gilman argued that women's contributions to civilization, throughout history, have been halted because of an androcentric culture. She believed that womankind was the underdeveloped half of humanity, and improvement was necessary to prevent the deterioration of the human race.[45] Gilman believed economic independence is the only thing that could really bring freedom for women and make them equal to men. In 1898 she published Women and Economics, a theoretical treatise which argued, among other things, that women are subjugated by men, that motherhood should not preclude a woman from working outside the home, and that housekeeping, cooking, and child care, would be professionalized.[46] "The ideal woman," Gilman wrote, "was not only assigned a social role that locked her into her home, but she was also expected to like it, to be cheerful and gay, smiling and good-humored." When the sexual-economic relationship ceases to exist, life on the domestic front would certainly improve, as frustration in relationships often stems from the lack of social contact that the domestic wife has with the outside world.[47]

Gilman became a spokesperson on topics such as women's perspectives on work, dress reform, and family. Housework, she argued, should be equally shared by men and women, and that at an early age women should be encouraged to be independent. In many of her major works, including "The Home" (1903), Human Work (1904), and The Man-Made World (1911), Gilman also advocated women working outside of the home.[48]

Gilman argued that the home should be socially redefined. The home should shift from being an "economic entity" where a married couple live together because of the economic benefit or necessity, to a place where groups of men and groups of women can share in a "peaceful and permanent expression of personal life."[49]

Gilman believed having a comfortable and healthy lifestyle should not be restricted to married couples; all humans need a home that provides these amenities. She suggested that a communal type of housing open to both males and females, consisting of rooms, rooms of suites and houses, should be constructed. This would allow individuals to live singly and still have companionship and the comforts of a home. Both males and females would be totally economically independent in these living arrangements allowing for marriage to occur without either the male or the female's economic status having to change.

The structural arrangement of the home is also redefined by Gilman. She removes the kitchen from the home, leaving rooms to be arranged and extended in any form and freeing women from the provision of meals in the home. The home would become a true personal expression of the individual living in it.

Ultimately the restructuring of the home and manner of living will allow individuals, especially women, to become an "integral part of the social structure, in close, direct, permanent connection with the needs and uses of society." That would be a dramatic change for women, who generally considered themselves restricted by family life built upon their economic dependence on men.[50]

Feminism in stories and novellas edit

Gilman created a world in many of her stories with a feminist point of view. Two of her narratives, "What Diantha Did", and Herland, are good examples of Gilman focusing her work on how women are not just stay-at-home mothers they are expected to be; they are also people who have dreams, who are able to travel and work just as men do, and whose goals include a society where women are just as important as men. The world-building that is executed by Gilman, as well as the characters in these two stories and others, embody the change that was needed in the early 1900s in a way that is now commonly seen as feminism.

Gilman uses world-building in Herland to demonstrate the equality that she longed to see. The women of Herland are the providers. This makes them appear to be the dominant sex, taking over the gender roles that are typically given to men. Elizabeth Keyser notes, "In Herland the supposedly superior sex becomes the inferior or disadvantaged ..."[51] In this society, Gilman makes it to where women are focused on having leadership within the community, fulfilling roles that are stereotypically seen as being male roles, and running an entire community without the same attitudes that men have concerning their work and the community. However, the attitude men carried concerning women were degrading, especially by progressive women, like Gilman. Using Herland, Gilman challenged this stereotype, and made the society of Herland a type of paradise. Gilman uses this story to confirm the stereotypically devalued qualities of women are valuable, show strength, and shatters traditional utopian structure for future works.[52] Essentially, Gilman creates Herland's society to have women hold all the power, showing more equality in this world, alluding to changes she wanted to see in her lifetime.

Gilman's feministic approach differs from Herland in "What Diantha Did". One character in this story, Diantha, breaks through the traditional expectation of women, showing Gilman's desires for what a woman would be able to do in real-life society. Throughout the story, Gilman portrays Diantha as a character who strikes through the image of businesses in the U.S., who challenges gender norms and roles, and who believed that women could provide the solution to the corruption in big business in society.[53] Gilman chooses to have Diantha choose a career that is stereotypically not one a woman would have because in doing so, she is showing that the salaries and wages of traditional women's jobs are unfair. Diantha's choice to run a business allows her to come out of the shadows and join society. Gilman's works, especially her work with "What Diantha Did", are a call for change, a battle cry that would cause panic in men and power in women.[54] Gilman used her work as a platform for a call to change, as a way to reach women and have them begin the movement toward freedom.

Race edit

In 1908, Gilman wrote an article in the American Journal of Sociology in which she set out her views on what she perceived to be a "sociological problem" concerning the presence of a large Black American minority in America. Calling Black Americans "a large body of aliens" whose skin color made them "widely dissimilar and in many respects inferior," Gilman claimed that the economic and social situation of Black Americans was "to us a social injury" and noted that slavery meant that it was the responsibility of White Americans to alleviate this situation, observing that if White Americans "cannot so behave as to elevate and improve [Black Americans]", then it would be the case that White Americans would "need some scheme of race betterment" rather than vice versa.[55] Gilman was unequivocal about the ills of slavery and the wrongs which many White Americans had done to Black Americans, stating that irrespective of any crimes committed by Black Americans, "[Whites] were the original offender, and have a list of injuries to [Black Americans], greatly outnumbering the counter list." She proposed that those Black Americans who were not "self-supporting" or who were "actual criminals" (which she clearly distinguished from "the decent, self-supporting, progressive negroes") could be "enlisted" into a quasi-military state labour force, which she viewed as akin to conscription in certain countries. Such force would be deployed in "modern agriculture" and infrastructure, and those who had eventually acquired adequate skills and training "would be graduated with honor" – Gilman believed that any such conscription should be "compulsory at the bottom, perfectly free at the top."

Gilman's racism lead her to espouse eugenicist beliefs, claiming that Old Stock Americans were surrendering their country to immigrants who were diluting the nation's racial purity.[56] When asked about her stance on the matter during a trip to London she declared "I am an Anglo-Saxon before everything."[57] In an effort to gain the vote for all women, she spoke out against literacy voting tests at the 1903 National American Woman Suffrage Association convention in New Orleans.[58]

Literary critic Susan S. Lanser says "The Yellow Wallpaper" should be interpreted by focusing on Gilman's racism.[59] Other literary critics have built on Lanser's work to understand Gilman's ideas in relation to turn-of-the-century culture more broadly.[60][61]

Animals edit

Gilman's feminist works often included stances and arguments for reforming the use of domesticated animals.[62] In Herland, Gilman's utopian society excludes all domesticated animals, including livestock. Additionally, in Moving the Mountain Gilman addresses the ills of animal domestication related to inbreeding. In "When I Was a Witch", the narrator witnesses and intervenes in instances of animal use as she travels through New York, liberating work horses, cats, and lapdogs by rendering them "comfortably dead". One literary scholar connected the regression of the female narrator in "The Yellow Wallpaper" to the parallel status of domesticated felines.[63] She wrote in a letter to the Saturday Evening Post that the automobile would eliminate the cruelty to horses used to pull carriages and cars.[64]

Critical reception edit

"The Yellow Wallpaper" was initially met with a mixed reception. One anonymous letter submitted to the Boston Transcript read, "The story could hardly, it would seem, give pleasure to any reader, and to many whose lives have been touched through the dearest ties by this dread disease, it must bring the keenest pain. To others, whose lives have become a struggle against heredity of mental derangement, such literature contains deadly peril. Should such stories be allowed to pass without severest censure?"[65]

Positive reviewers describe it as impressive because it is the most suggestive and graphic account of why women who live monotonous lives are susceptible to mental illness.[66]

Although Gilman had gained international fame with the publication of Women and Economics in 1898, by the end of World War I, she seemed out of tune with her times. In her autobiography she admitted that "unfortunately my views on the sex question do not appeal to the Freudian complex of today, nor are people satisfied with a presentation of religion as a help in our tremendous work of improving this world."[67]

Ann J. Lane writes in Herland and Beyond that "Gilman offered perspectives on major issues of gender with which we still grapple; the origins of women's subjugation, the struggle to achieve both autonomy and intimacy in human relationships; the central role of work as a definition of self; new strategies for rearing and educating future generations to create a humane and nurturing environment."[68]

Bibliography edit

Gilman's works include:[69]

Poetry collections edit

  • In This Our World,1st ed. Oakland: McCombs & Vaughn, 1893. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1895. 2nd ed.; San Francisco: Press of James H. Barry, 1895.
  • Suffrage Songs and Verses. New York: Charlton Co., 1911. Microfilm. New Haven: Research Publications, 1977, History of Women #6558.
  • The Later Poetry of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Newark, DE: University of Delaware Press, 1996.

Short stories edit

Gilman published 186 short stories in magazines, newspapers, and many were published in her self-published monthly, The Forerunner. Many literary critics have ignored these short stories.[70]

  • "Circumstances Alter Cases." Kate Field's Washington, July 23, 1890: 55–56. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995. 32–38.
  • "That Rare Jewel." Women's Journal, May 17, 1890: 158. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 20–24.
  • "The Unexpected." Kate Field's Washington, May 21, 1890: 335–6. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 25–31.
  • "An Extinct Angel." Kate Field's Washington, September 23, 1891:199–200. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 48–50.
  • "The Giant Wistaria." New England Magazine 4 (1891): 480–85. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 39–47.
  • "The Yellow Wall-paper." New England Magazine 5 (1892): 647–56; Boston: Small, Maynard & Co., 1899; NY: Feminist Press, 1973 Afterword Elaine Hedges; Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. Introduction Robert Shulman.
  • "The Rocking-Chair." Worthington's Illustrated 1 (1893): 453–59. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 51–61.
  • "An Elopement." San Francisco Call, July 10, 1893: 1. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 66–68.
  • "Deserted." San Francisco Call July 17, 1893: 1–2. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 62–65.
  • "Through This." Kate Field's Washington, September 13, 1893: 166. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 69–72.
  • "A Day's Berryin.'" Impress, October 13, 1894: 4–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 78–82.
  • "Five Girls." Impress, December 1, 1894: 5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 83–86.
  • "One Way Out." Impress, December 29, 1894: 4–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 87–91.
  • "The Misleading of Pendleton Oaks." Impress, October 6, 1894: 4–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 73–77.
  • "An Unnatural Mother." Impress, February 16, 1895: 4–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 98–106.
  • "An Unpatented Process." Impress, January 12, 1895: 4–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 92–97.
  • "According to Solomon." Forerunner 1:2 (1909):1–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 122–129.
  • "Three Thanksgivings." Forerunner 1 (1909): 5–12. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 107–121.
  • "What Diantha Did. A NOVEL". Forerunner 1 (1909–11); NY: Charlton Co., 1910; London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1912.
  • "The Cottagette." Forerunner 1:10 (1910): 1–5. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 130–138.
  • "When I Was a Witch." Forerunner 1 (1910): 1–6. The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. Ed. Ann J. Lane. NY: Pantheon, 1980. 21–31.
  • "In Two Houses." Forerunner 2:7 (1911): 171–77. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 159–171.
  • "Making a Change." Forerunner 2:12 (1911): 311–315. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 182–190.
  • "Moving the Mountain." Forerunner 2 (1911); NY: Charlton Co., 1911; The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. Ed. Ann J. Lane. NY: Pantheon, 1980. 178–188.
  • "The Crux.A NOVEL." Forerunner 2 (1910); NY: Charlton Co., 1911; The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. Ed. Ann J. Lane. NY: Pantheon, 1980. 116–122.
  • "The Jumping-off Place." Forerunner 2:4 (1911): 87–93. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 148–158.
  • "The Widow's Might." Forerunner 2:1 (1911): 3–7. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 139–147.
  • "Turned." Forerunner 2:9 (1911): 227–32. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 182–191.
  • "Mrs. Elder's Idea." Forerunner 3:2 (1912): 29–32. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 191–199.
  • "Their House." Forerunner 3:12 (1912): 309–14. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories''. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 200–209.
  • "A Council of War." Forerunner 4:8 (1913): 197–201. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 235–243.
  • "Bee Wise." Forerunner 4:7 (1913): 169–173. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 226–234.
  • "Her Beauty." Forerunner 4:2 (1913): 29–33. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 210–217.
  • "Mrs. Hines's Money." Forerunner 4:4 (1913): 85–89. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 218–226.
  • "A Partnership." Forerunner 5:6 (1914): 141–45. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 253–261.
  • "Begnina Machiavelli. A NOVEL." Forerunner 5 (1914); NY: Such and Such Publishing, 1998.
  • "Fulfilment." Forerunner 5:3 (1914): 57–61. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995.
  • "If I Were a Man." Physical Culture 32 (1914): 31–34. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 262–268.
  • "Mr. Peebles's Heart." Forerunner 5:9 (1914): 225–29. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 269–276.
  • "Dr. Clair's Place." Forerunner 6:6 (1915): 141–45. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 295–303.
  • "Girls and Land." Forerunner 6:5 (1915): 113–117. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 286–294.
  • "Herland. A NOVEL. " Forerunner 6 (1915); NY: Pantheon Books, 1979.
  • "Mrs. Merrill's Duties." Forerunner 6:3 (1915): 57–61. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 277–285.
  • "A Surplus Woman." Forerunner 7:5 (1916): 113–18. "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 304–313.
  • "Joan's Defender." Forerunner 7:6 (1916): 141–45. '"The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Other Stories. Ed. Robert Shulman. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995. 314–322.
  • "The Girl in the Pink Hat." Forerunner 7 (1916): 39–46. The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. Ed. Ann J. Lane. NY: Pantheon, 1980. 39–45.
  • "With Her in Ourland: Sequel to Herland. A NOVEL." Forerunner 7 (1916); Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1997.

Novels and novellas edit

  • What Diantha Did. Forerunner. 1909–10.
  • The Crux. Forerunner. 1911.
  • Moving the Mountain. Forerunner. 1911.
  • Mag-Marjorie. Forerunner. 1912.
  • Won Over Forerunner. 1913.
  • Benigna Machiavelli Forerunner. 1914.
  • Herland. Forerunner. 1915.
  • With Her in Ourland. Forerunner. 1916.
  • Unpunished. Ed. Catherine J. Golden and Denise D. Knight. New York: Feminist Press, 1997.

Drama/dialogues edit

The majority of Gilman's dramas are inaccessible as they are only available from the originals. Some were printed/reprinted in Forerunner, however.

  • "Dame Nature Interviewed on the Woman Question as It Looks to Her" Kate Field's Washington (1890): 138–40.
  • "The Twilight." Impress (November 10, 1894): 4–5.
  • "Story Studies", Impress, November 17, 1894: 5.
  • "The Story Guessers", Impress, November 24, 1894: 5.
  • "Three Women." Forerunner 2 (1911): 134.
  • "Something to Vote For", Forerunner 2 (1911) 143–53.
  • "The Ceaseless Struggle of Sex: A Dramatic View." Kate Field's Washington. April 9, 1890, 239–40.

Non-fiction edit

Book-length edit

  • His Religion and Hers: A Study of the Faith of Our Fathers and the Work of Our Mothers. NY and London: Century Co., 1923; London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1924; Westport: Hyperion Press, 1976.
  • Gems of Art for the Home and Fireside. Providence: J. A. and R. A. Reid, 1888.
  • Concerning Children. Boston: Small, Maynard & Co., 1900.
  • The Home: Its Work and Influence. New York: McClure, Phillips, & Co., 1903.
  • Human Work. New York: McClure, Phillips, & Co., 1904.
  • The Man-Made World; or, Our Androcentric Culture. New York: Charton Co., 1911.
  • Our Brains and What Ails Them. Serialized in Forerunner. 1912.
  • Social Ethics. Serialized in Forerunner. 1914.
  • Our Changing Morality. Ed. Freda Kirchway. NY: Boni, 1930. 53–66.

Short and serial non-fiction edit

  • "On Advertising for Marriage." The Alpha 11, September 1, 1885: 7
  • "Why Women Do Not Reform Their Dress." Woman's Journal, October 9, 1886: 338.
  • "A Protest Against Petticoats." Woman's Journal, January 8, 1887: 60.
  • "The Providence Ladies Gymnasium." Providence Journal 8 (1888): 2.
  • "How Much Must We Read?" Pacific Monthly 1 (1889): 43–44.
  • "Altering Human Nature." California Nationalist, May 10, 1890: 10.
  • "Are Women Better Than Men?" Pacific Monthly 3 (1891): 9–11.
  • "A Lady on the Cap and Apron Question." Wasp, June 6, 1891: 3.
  • "The Reactive Lies of Gallantry." Belford's ns 2 (1892): 205–8.
  • "The Vegetable Chinaman." Housekeeper's Weekly, June 24, 1893: 3.
  • "The Saloon and Its Annex." Stockton Mail 4 (1893): 4.
  • "The Business League for Women." Impress 1 (1894): 2.
  • "Official Report of Woman's Congress." Impress 1 (1894): 3.
  • "John Smith and Armenia." Impress, January 12, 1895: 2–3.
  • "The American Government." Woman's Column, June 6, 1896: 3.
  • "When Socialism Began." American Fabian 3 (1897): 1–2.
  • "Causes and Uses of the Subjection of Women." Woman's Journal, December 24, 1898: 410.
  • "The Automobile as a Reformer." Saturday Evening Post, June 3, 1899: 778.
  • "Superfluous Women." Women's Journal, April 7, 1900: 105.
  • "Esthetic Dyspepsia." Saturday Evening Post, August 4, 1900: 12.
  • "Ideals of Child Culture." Child Stude For Mothers and Teachers. Ed Margaret Sangster. Philadelphia: Booklovers Library, 1901. 93–101.
  • "Should Wives Work?" Success 5 (1902): 139.
  • "Fortschritte der Frauen in Amerika." Neues Frauenleben 1:1 (1903): 2–5.
  • "The Passing of the Home in Great American Cities." Cosmopolitan 38 (1904): 137–47.
  • "The Beauty of a Block." Independent, July 14, 1904: 67–72.
  • "The Home and the Hospital." Good Housekeeping 40 (1905): 9.
  • "Some Light on the [Single Woman's] 'Problem.'" American Magazine 62 (1906): 4270428.
  • "Why Cooperative Housekeeping Fails." Harper's Bazaar 41 (July 1907): 625–629.
  • "Social Darwinism." American Journal of Sociology 12 (1907): 713–14.
  • "A Suggestion on the Negro Problem." American Journal of Sociology 14 (1908): 78–85.
  • "How Home Conditions React Upon the Family." American Journal of Sociology 14 (1909): 592–605.
  • "Children's Clothing." Harper's Bazaar 44 (1910): 24.
  • "On Dogs." Forerunner 2 (1911): 206–9.
  • "Should Women Use Violence?" Pictorial Review 14 (1912): 11, 78–79.
  • "How to Lighten the Labor of Women." McCall's 40 (1912): 14–15, 77.
  • "What 'Love' Really Is." Pictorial Review 14 (1913): 11, 57.
  • "Gum Chewing in Public." New York Times, May 20, 1914:12:5.
  • "A Rational Position on Suffrage/At the Request of the New York Times, Mrs. Gilman Presents the Best Arguments Possible in Behalf of Votes for Women." New York Times Magazine, March 7, 1915: 14–15.
  • "What is Feminism?" Boston Sunday Herald Magazine, September 3, 1916: 7.
  • "The Housekeeper and the Food Problem." Annals of the American Academy 74 (1917): 123–40.
  • "Concerning Clothes." Independent, June 22, 1918: 478, 483.
  • "The Socializing of Education." Public, April 5, 1919: 348–49.
  • "A Woman's Party." Suffragist 8 (1920): 8–9.
  • "Making Towns Fit to Live In." Century 102 (1921): 361–366.
  • "Cross-Examining Santa Claus." Century 105 (1922): 169–174.
  • "Is America Too Hospitable?" Forum 70 (1923): 1983–89.
  • "Toward Monogamy." Nation, June 11, 1924: 671–73.
  • "The Nobler Male." Forum 74 (1925): 19–21.
  • "American Radicals." New York Jewish Daily Forward 1 (1926): 1.
  • "Progress through Birth Control." North American Review 224 (1927): 622–29.
  • "Divorce and Birth Control." Outlook, January 25, 1928: 130–31.
  • "Feminism and Social Progress." Problems of Civilization. Ed. Baker Brownell. NY: D. Van Nostrand, 1929. 115–42.
  • "Sex and Race Progress." Sex in Civilization. Eds V. F. Calverton and S. D. Schmalhausen. NY: Macaulay, 1929. 109–23.
  • "Parasitism and Civilized Vice." Woman's Coming of Age. Ed. S. D. Schmalhausen. NY: Liveright, 1931. 110–26.
  • "Birth Control, Religion and the Unfit." Nation, January 27, 1932: 108–109.
  • "The Right to Die." Forum 94 (1935): 297–300.

Self-publications edit

The Forerunner. Seven volumes, 1909–16. Microfiche. NY: Greenwood, 1968.

Selected lectures edit

There are 90 reports of the lectures that Gilman gave in The United States and Europe.[70]

  • "Club News." Weekly Nationalist, June 21, 1890: 6. [Re. "On Human Nature."]
  • "Our Place Today", Los Angeles Woman's Club, January 21, 1891.
  • "With Women Who Write." San Francisco Examiner, March 1891, 3:3. [Re. "The Coming Woman."]
  • "Safeguards Suggested for Social Evils." San Francisco Call, April 24, 1892: 12:4.
  • "The Labor Movement." Alameda County Federation of Trades, 1893. Alameda County, CA Labor Union Meetings. September 2, 1892.
  • "Announcement." Impress 1 (1894): 2. [Re. Series of "Talks on Social Questions."]
  • "All the Comforts of a Home." San Francisco Examiner, May 22, 1895: 9. [Re. "Simplicity and Decoration."]
  • "The Washington Convention." Woman's Journal, February 15, 1896: 49–50. [Re. California.]
  • "Woman Suffrage League." Boston Advertiser, November 10, 1897: 8:1. [Re. "The Economic Basis of the Woman Question."]
  • "Bellamy Memorial Meeting." American Fabian 4: (1898): 3.
  • "An Evening With Kipling." Daily Argus, March 14, 1899: 4:2.
  • "Scientific Training of Domestic Servants." Women and Industrial Life, Vol. 6 of International Congress of Women of 1899. Ed Countess of Aberdeen. London: T. Unwin Fisher, 1900. 109.
  • "Society and the Child." Brooklyn Eagle, December 11, 1902: 8:4.
  • "Woman and Work/ Popular Fallacy that They are a Leisure Class, Says Mrs. Gilman." New York Tribune, February 26, 1903: 7:1.
  • "A New Light on the Woman Question." Woman's Journal, April 25, 1904: 76–77.
  • "Straight Talk by Mrs. Gilman is Looked For." San Francisco Call, July 16, 1905: 33:2.
  • "Women and Social Service." Warren: National American Woman Suffrage Association, 1907.
  • "Higher Marriage Mrs. Gilman's Plea." New York Times, December 29, 1908: 2:3.
  • "Three Women Leaders in Hub." Boston Post, December 7, 1909: 1:1–2 and 14:5–6.
  • "Warless World When Women's Slavery Ends." San Francisco Examiner, November 14, 1910: 4:1.
  • "Lecture Given by Mrs. Gilman." San Francisco Call, November 15, 1911: 7:3. [Re. "The Society-- Body and Soul."]
  • "Mrs. Gilman Assorts Sins." New York Times, June 3, 1913: 3:8
  • "Adam the Real Rib, Mrs. Gilman Insists." New York Times, February 19, 1914: 9:3.
  • "Advocates a 'World City.'" New York Times, January 6, 1915: 15:5. [Re. Arbitration of diplomatic disputes by an international agency.]
  • "The Listener." Boston Transcript, April 14, 1917: 14:1. [Re. Announcement of lecture series.]
  • "Great Duty for Women After War." Boston Post, February 26, 1918: 2:7.
  • "Mrs. Gilman Urges Hired Mother Idea." New York Times, September 23, 1919: 36:1–2.
  • "Eulogize Susan B. Anthony." New York Times, February 16, 1920: 15:6. [Re. Gilman and others eulogize Anthony on the centenary of her birth.]
  • "Walt Whitman Dinner." New York Times, June 1, 1921: 16:7. [Gilman speaks at annual meeting of Whitman Society in New York.]
  • "Fiction of America Being Melting Pot Unmasked by CPG." Dallas Morning News, February 15, 1926: 9:7–8 and 15:8.

Diaries, journals, biographies, and letters edit

  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Making of a Radical Feminist. Mary A. Hill. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1980.
  • A Journey from Within: The Love Letters of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1897–1900. Ed. Mary A. Hill. Lewisburg: Bucknill UP, 1995.
  • The Diaries of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 2 Vols. Ed. Denise D. Knight. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1994.

Autobiography edit

  • The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: An Autobiography. New York and London: D. Appleton-Century Co., 1935; NY: Arno Press, 1972; and Harper & Row, 1975.

Academic studies edit

  • Allen, Judith (2009). The Feminism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Sexualities, Histories, Progressivism, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-01463-0
  • Allen, Polly Wynn (1988). Building Domestic Liberty: Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Architectural Feminism, University of Massachusetts Press, ISBN 0-87023-627-X
  • Berman, Jeffrey. "The Unrestful Cure: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and 'The Yellow Wallpaper.'" In The Captive Imagination: A Casebook on The Yellow Wallpaper, edited by Catherine Golden. New York: Feminist Press, 1992, pp. 211–41.
  • Carter-Sanborn, Kristin. "Restraining Order: The Imperialist Anti-Violence of Charlotte Perkins Gilman." Arizona Quarterly 56.2 (Summer 2000): 1–36.
  • Ceplair, Larry, ed. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Nonfiction Reader. New York: Columbia UP, 1991.
  • Davis, Cynthia J. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Biography (Stanford University Press; 2010) 568 pages; major scholarly biography
  • Davis, Cynthia J. and Denise D. Knight. Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Her Contemporaries: Literary and Intellectual Contexts. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2004.
  • Deegan, Mary Jo. "Introduction." With Her in Ourland: Sequel to Herland. Eds. Mary Jo Deegan and Michael R. Hill. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1997. 1–57.
  • Eldredge, Charles C. Charles Walter Stetson, Color, and Fantasy. Lawrence: Spencer Museum of Art, The U of Kansas, 1982.
  • Ganobcsik-Williams, Lisa. "The Intellectualism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Evolutionary Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Gender." Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Optimist Reformer. Eds. Jill Rudd and Val Gough. Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1999.
  • Golden, Catherine. The Captive Imagination: A Casebook on The Yellow Wallpaper. New York: Feminist Press, 1992.
---. "`Written to Drive Nails With’: Recalling the Early Poetry of Charlotte Perkins Gilman." in Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Optimist Reformer. Eds. Jill Rudd and Val Gough. Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1999. 243-66.
  • Gough, Val. "`In the Twinkling of an Eye’: Gilman's Utopian Imagination." in A Very Different Story: Studies on the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Eds. Val Gough and Jill Rudd. Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 1998. 129–43.
  • Gubar, Susan. "She in Herland: Feminism as Fantasy." in Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Woman and Her Work. Ed. Sheryl L. Meyering. Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1989. 191–201.
  • Hill, Mary Armfield. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Journey From Within." in A Very Different Story: Studies on the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Eds. Val Gough and Jill Rudd. Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 1998. 8–23.
  • Hill, Mary A. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Making of a Radical Feminist. (Temple University Press, 1980).
  • Horowitz, Helen Lefkowitz, Wild Unrest: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Making of "The Yellow Wall-Paper" (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010).
  • Huber, Hannah, "Charlotte Perkins Gilman." Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 381: Writers on Women's Rights and United States Suffrage, edited by George P. Anderson. Gale, pp. 140–52.
  • Huber, Hannah, "‘The One End to Which Her Whole Organism Tended’: Social Evolution in Edith Wharton and Charlotte Perkins Gilman." Critical Insights: Edith Wharton, edited by Myrto Drizou, Salem Press, pp. 48–62.
  • Karpinski, Joanne B., "The Economic Conundrum in the Lifewriting of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. in The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Ed. Catherine J. Golden and Joanne S. Zangrando. U of Delaware P, 2000. 35–46.
  • Kessler, Carol Farley. "Dreaming Always of Lovely Things Beyond’: Living Toward Herland, Experiential foregrounding." in The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Eds. Catherine J. Golden and Joanna Schneider Zangrando. Newark: U of Delaware P, 2000. 89–103.
  • Knight, Denise D. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Study of the Short Fiction, Twayne Studies in Short Fiction (Twayne Publishers, 1997).
---. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Shadow of Racism." American Literary Realism, vol. 32, no. 2, 2000, pp. 159–169. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/27746975.
---. "Introduction." Herland, `The Yellow Wall-Paper’ and Selected Writings. New York: Penguin, 1999.
  • Lane, Ann J. "Gilman, Charlotte Perkins"; American National Biography Online, 2000.
---. "The Fictional World of Charlotte Perkins Gilman." in The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. Ed. Ann J. Lane. New York: Pantheon, 1980.
---. "Introduction." Herland: A Lost Feminist Utopian Novel by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. 1915. Rpt. New York: Pantheon Books, 1979
---. To Herland and Beyond: The Life of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. New York: Pantheon, 1990.
  • Lanser, Susan S. "Feminist Criticism, 'The Yellow Wallpaper,' and the Politics of Color in America." Feminist Studies, Vol. 15, No. 3, Feminist Reinterpretations/Reinterpretations of Feminism (Autumn, 1989), pp. 415–441. JSTOR, Reprinted in "The Yellow Wallpaper": Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Eds. Thomas L. Erskine and Connie L. Richards. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1993. 225–256.
  • Long, Lisa A. "Herland and the Gender of Science." in MLA Approaches to Teaching Gilman's The Yellow Wall-Paper and Herland. Eds. Denise D. Knight and Cynthia J. David. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2003. 125–132.
  • Mitchell, S. Weir, M.D. "Camp Cure." Nurse and Patient, and Camp Cure. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1877
---. Wear and Tear, or Hints for the Overworked. 1887. New York: Arno Press, 1973.
  • Oliver, Lawrence J. "W. E. B. Du Bois, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and ‘A Suggestion on the Negro Problem.’" American Literary Realism, vol. 48, no. 1, 2015, pp. 25–39. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/amerlitereal.48.1.0025.
  • Oliver, Lawrence J. and Gary Scharnhorst. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman v. Ambrose Bierce: The Literary Politics of Gender in Fin-de-Siècle California." Journal of the West (July 1993): 52–60.
  • Palmeri, Ann. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Forerunner of a Feminist Social Science." in Discovering Reality: Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics, Methodology and Philosophy of Science. Eds. Sandra Harding and Merrill B. Hintikka. Dordrecht: Reidel, 1983. 97–120.
  • Scharnhorst, Gary. Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Boston: Twayne, 1985. Studies Gilman as writer
  • Scharnhorst, Gary, and Denise D. Knight. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Library: A Reconstruction." Resources for American Literary Studies 23:2 (1997): 181–219.
  • Stetson, Charles Walter. Endure: The Diaries of Charles Walter Stetson. Ed. Mary A. Hill. Philadelphia: Temple UP, 1985.
  • Tuttle, Jennifer S. "Rewriting the West Cure: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Owen Wister, and the Sexual Politics of Neurasthenia." The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Eds. Catherine J. Golden and Joanna Schneider Zangrando. Newark: U of Delaware P, 2000. 103–121.
  • Von Rosk, Nancy. "Women, Work and Cross-Class Alliances in the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman." Working Women in American Literature, 1865–1950. Miriam Gogol ed. New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 2018. 69–91.
  • Wegener, Frederick. "What a Comfort a Woman Doctor Is!’ Medical Women in the Life and Writing of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. In Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Optimist Reformer. Eds. Jill Rudd & Val Gough. Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1999. 45–73.
  • Weinbaum, Alys Eve. "Writing Feminist Genealogy: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Racial Nationalism, and the Reproduction of Maternalist Feminism." Feminist Studies 27 (Summer 2001): 271–30.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Charlotte Perkins Gilman". Encyclopaedia Britannica. from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved August 21, 2018.
  2. ^ "Gilman, Charlotte Perkins". National Women's Hall of Fame. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  3. ^ Gilman, Living, 10.
  4. ^ Denise D. Knight, The Diaries of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia: 1994) xiv.
  5. ^ Polly Wynn Allen, Building Domestic Liberty, (1988) 30.
  6. ^ Gilman, Autobiography., 26.
  7. ^ Gilman, "Autobiography", Chapter 5
  8. ^ Gilman, Autobiography, 29.
  9. ^ a b Kate Bolick, "The Equivocal Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman", (2019).
  10. ^ (PDF). betweenthecovers.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 14, 2020. Retrieved February 13, 2020.
  11. ^ Gilman, Autobiography, 82.
  12. ^ "Katharine Beecher Stetson". MacDowell studios (macdowell.org).
  13. ^ Gilman, Autobiography, 90.
  14. ^ "Channing, Grace Ellery, 1862–1937. Papers of Grace Ellery Channing, 1806–1973: A Finding Aid". Harvard University Library. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  15. ^ a b Knight, Diaries, 408.
  16. ^ Davis, Cynthia (December 2005). "Love and Economics: Charlotte Perkins Gilman on "The Woman Question"" (PDF). ATQ (The American Transcendental Quarterly). 19 (4): 242–248. Retrieved November 25, 2018.
  17. ^ Harrison, Pat (July 3, 2013). "The Evolution of Charlotte Perkins Gilman". Radcliffe Magazine. Harvard University. Retrieved November 25, 2018.
  18. ^ Knight, Diaries, 525.
  19. ^ Knight, Diaries, 163.
  20. ^ a b Knight, Diaries.
  21. ^ Knight, Diaries, 648–666.
  22. ^ a b c Knight, Diaries, p. 813.
  23. ^ Polly Wynn Allen, Building Domestic Liberty, 54.
  24. ^ Gilman, Autobiography 187, 198.
  25. ^ Knight, Diaries, 409.
  26. ^ Gale, Cengage Learning (2016). A Study Guide for Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "Herland". p. Introduction 5. ISBN 9781410348029.
  27. ^ "The Yellow Wall-paper". The Feminist Press. Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  28. ^ Julie Bates Dock, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and the History of Its Publication and Reception. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998; p. 6.
  29. ^ "Charlotte Perkins Gilman".
  30. ^ Dock, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and the History of Its Publication and Reception, pp. 23–24.
  31. ^ Knight, Diaries, 601
  32. ^ Charlotte Perkins Gilman, "Women and Economics" in Alice S. Rossi, ed., The Feminist Papers: From Adams to de Beauvoir (1997), section 1 only, 572–576.
  33. ^ Knight, Diaries, 681.
  34. ^ Knight, Diaries, 811.
  35. ^ Sari Edelstein, "Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Yellow Newspaper". Legacy, 24(1), 72–92. Retrieved October 28, 2008, from GenderWatch (GW) database. (Document ID: 1298797291).
  36. ^ Knight, Diaries, 812.
  37. ^ Allen, Building Domestic Liberty, 30.
  38. ^ Knight, Diaries, 323–385.
  39. ^ Knight, Diaries, 385.
  40. ^ Knight, Diaries, 407.
  41. ^ Gilman, Autobiography, 96.
  42. ^ Ann J. Lane, To Herland and Beyond, 230.
  43. ^ Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Women and Economics (Boston, MA: Small, Maynard & Co., 1898).
  44. ^ Carl N. Degler, "Charlotte Perkins Gilman on the Theory and Practice of Feminism", American Quarterly, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Spring, 1956), 26.
  45. ^ Davis and Knight, Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Her Contemporaries, 206.
  46. ^ Gilman, Women and Economics.
  47. ^ Degler, "Theory and Practice," 27.
  48. ^ Degler, "Theory and Practice," 27–35.
  49. ^ Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (2005). Kolmar & Bartkowski (eds.). Feminist Theory. Boston: McGraw Hill. p. 114. ISBN 9780072826722.
  50. ^ Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (2005). Kolmar & Bartkowski (eds.). Feminist Theory. Boston: McGraw Hill. pp. 110–114. ISBN 9780072826722.
  51. ^ Keyser, Elizabeth (1992). Looking Backward: From Herland to Gulliver's Travels. G.K. Hall & Company. p. 160.
  52. ^ Donaldson, Laura E. (March 1989). "The Eve of De-Struction: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Feminist Recreation of Paradise". Women's Studies. 16 (3/4): 378. doi:10.1080/00497878.1989.9978776.
  53. ^ Fama, Katherine A. (2017). "Domestic Data and Feminist Momentum: The Narrative Accounting of Helen Stuart Campbell and Charlotte Perkins Gilman". Studies in American Naturalism. 12 (1): 319. doi:10.1353/san.2017.0006. S2CID 148635798.
  54. ^ Seitler, Dana (March 2003). "Unnatural Selection: Mothers, Eugenic Feminism, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Regeneration Narratives". American Quarterly. 55 (1): 63. doi:10.1353/aq.2003.0001. S2CID 143831741.
  55. ^ Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (July 1908 – May 1909). "A Suggestion on the Negro Problem". The American Journal of Sociology. 14. Retrieved April 24, 2019.
  56. ^ After her divorce from Stetson, she began lecturing on Nationalism. She was inspired from Edward Bellamy's utopian socialist romance Looking Backward. Alys Eve Weinbaum, "Writing Feminist Genealogy: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Racial Nationalism, and the Reproduction of Maternalist Feminism", Feminist Studies, Vol. 27, No. 4 (Summer, 2001), pp. 271–302. Accessed November 3, 2008.
  57. ^ Davis, C. (2010). Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Biography. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804738897. Retrieved November 15, 2014.
  58. ^ Allen, Building Domestic Liberty, 52.
  59. ^ Susan S. Lanser, "The Yellow Wallpaper," and the Politics of Color in America," Feminist Studies, Vol. 15, No. 3, Feminist Reinterpretations/Reinterpretations of Feminism (Autumn, 1989), pp. 415–441 Accessed March 5, 2019
  60. ^ Denise D. Knight, "Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Shadow of Racism," American Literary Realism, Vol. 32, No. 2 (Winter, 2000), pp. 159–169, accessed March 9, 2019.
  61. ^ Lawrence J. Oliver, "W. E. B. Du Bois, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and 'A Suggestion on the Negro Problem'," American Literary Realism, Vol. 48, No. 1 (Fall 2015), pp. 25–39, accessed March 5, 2019
  62. ^ McKenna, Erin (2012). "Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Women, Animals, and Oppression". In Hamington, Maurice; Bardwell-Jones, Celia (eds.). Contemporary Feminist Pragmatism. New York: Routledge Publishing. ISBN 978-0-203-12232-7.
  63. ^ Golden, Catherine (Fall 2007). "Marking Her Territory: Feline Behavior in "The Yellow Wall-Paper"". American Literary Realism. 40: 16–31. doi:10.1353/alr.2008.0017. S2CID 161505591.
  64. ^ Stetson, Charlotte Perkins (June 3, 1899). "The Automobile as Reformer". Saturday Evening Post. 171 (49): 778. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  65. ^ M.D., "Perlious Stuff," Boston Evening Transcript, April 8, 1892, p.6, col.2. in Julie Bates Dock, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" and the History of Its Publication and Reception, (University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998) 103.
  66. ^ Henry B. Blackwell, "Literary Notices: The Yellow Wall Paper," The Woman's Journal, June 17, 1899, p.187 in Julie Bates Dock, Charlote Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-paper" and the History of Its Publication and Reception, (University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998) 107.
  67. ^ Gilman, Living, 184
  68. ^ Golden, Catherine J., and Joanna Zangrando. The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. (Newark: University of Delaware P, 2000) 211.
  69. ^ The bibliographic information is accredited to the "Guide to Research Materials" section of Kim Well's website: Wells, Kim. Domestic Goddesses. August 23, 1999. Online. Internet. Accessed October 27, 2008. August 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  70. ^ a b Kim Wells, "Domestic Goddesses," August 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Women Writers.net, August 23, 1999. www.womenwriters.net/

External links edit

  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Society
  • Works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Internet Archive
  • Works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Library of Congress, with 107 library catalog records
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • The Feminist Press
  • Essays by Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Quotidiana.org
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman". Books and Writers.
  • Suffrage Songs and Verses
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Papers. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Digital Collection. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Papers, Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester

Audio files edit

  • The Yellow Wallpaper, Suspense, CBS radio, 1948
  • 2 short radio episodes of Gilman's writing, and from California Legacy Project.

charlotte, perkins, gilman, née, perkins, july, 1860, august, 1935, also, known, first, married, name, charlotte, perkins, stetson, american, humanist, novelist, writer, lecturer, advocate, social, reform, eugenicist, utopian, feminist, served, role, model, fu. Charlotte Perkins Gilman ˈ ɡ ɪ l m en nee Perkins July 3 1860 August 17 1935 also known by her first married name Charlotte Perkins Stetson was an American humanist novelist writer lecturer advocate for social reform and eugenicist 1 She was a utopian feminist and served as a role model for future generations of feminists because of her unorthodox concepts and lifestyle She has been inducted into the National Women s Hall of Fame 2 Her best remembered work today is her semi autobiographical short story The Yellow Wallpaper which she wrote after a severe bout of postpartum psychosis Charlotte Perkins GilmanBorn 1860 07 03 July 3 1860Hartford Connecticut U S DiedAugust 17 1935 1935 08 17 aged 75 Pasadena California U S OccupationWriter commercial artist magazine editor lecturer social reformerNotable works The Yellow Wallpaper HerlandWomen and EconomicsSpouseCharles Walter Stetson m 1884 div 1894 wbr Houghton Gilman m 1900 died 1934 wbr Children1Signature Contents 1 Early life 2 Adulthood 3 Career 3 1 The Yellow Wallpaper 3 2 Other notable works 4 Rest cure treatment 5 Social views and theories 5 1 Reform Darwinism and the role of women in society 5 2 Feminism in stories and novellas 5 3 Race 5 4 Animals 6 Critical reception 7 Bibliography 7 1 Poetry collections 7 2 Short stories 7 3 Novels and novellas 7 4 Drama dialogues 7 5 Non fiction 7 5 1 Book length 7 5 2 Short and serial non fiction 7 6 Self publications 7 7 Selected lectures 7 8 Diaries journals biographies and letters 7 9 Autobiography 7 10 Academic studies 8 Footnotes 9 External links 9 1 Audio filesEarly life editGilman was born on July 3 1860 in Hartford Connecticut to Mary Perkins formerly Mary Fitch Westcott and Frederic Beecher Perkins She had only one brother Thomas Adie who was fourteen months older because a physician advised Mary Perkins that she might die if she bore other children During Charlotte s infancy her father moved out and abandoned his wife and children and the remainder of her childhood was spent in poverty 1 Since their mother was unable to support the family on her own the Perkinses were often in the presence of her father s aunts namely Isabella Beecher Hooker a suffragist Harriet Beecher Stowe author of Uncle Tom s Cabin and Catharine Beecher educationalist Her schooling was erratic she attended seven different schools for a cumulative total of just four years ending when she was fifteen Her mother was not affectionate with her children To keep them from getting hurt as she had been she forbade her children from making strong friendships or reading fiction In her autobiography The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Gilman wrote that her mother showed affection only when she thought her young daughter was asleep 3 Although she lived a childhood of isolated impoverished loneliness she unknowingly prepared herself for the life that lay ahead by frequently visiting the public library and studying ancient civilizations on her own Additionally her father s love for literature influenced her and years later he contacted her with a list of books he felt would be worthwhile for her to read 4 Much of Gilman s youth was spent in Providence Rhode Island What friends she had were mainly male and she was unashamed for her time to call herself a tomboy 5 Her natural intelligence and breadth of knowledge always impressed her teachers who were nonetheless disappointed in her because she was a poor student 6 Her favorite subject was natural philosophy especially what later would become known as physics In 1878 the eighteen year old enrolled in classes at the Rhode Island School of Design with the monetary help of her absent father 7 and subsequently supported herself as an artist of trade cards She was a tutor and encouraged others to expand their artistic creativity 8 She was also a painter During her time at the Rhode Island School of Design Gilman met Martha Luther in about 1879 9 and was believed to be in a romantic relationship with Luther Gilman described the close relationship she had with Luther in her autobiography We were closely together increasingly happy together for four of those long years of girlhood She was nearer and dearer than any one up to that time This was love but not sex With Martha I knew perfect happiness We were not only extremely fond of each other but we had fun together deliciously Charlotte P Gilman The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman 1935 Letters between the two women chronicles their lives from 1883 to 1889 and contains over 50 letters including correspondence illustrations and manuscripts 10 They pursued their relationship until Luther called it off in order to marry a man in 1881 Gilman was devastated and detested romance and love until she met her first husband 9 Adulthood editIn 1884 she married the artist Charles Walter Stetson after initially declining his proposal because a gut feeling told her it was not the right thing for her 11 Their only child Katharine Beecher Stetson 1885 1979 12 was born the following year on March 23 1885 Charlotte Perkins Gilman suffered a very serious bout of post partum depression This was an age in which women were seen as hysterical and nervous beings thus when a woman claimed to be seriously ill after giving birth her claims were sometimes dismissed 13 nbsp Charlotte Perkins GilmanPhotograph by Frances Benjamin Johnston c 1900 Gilman moved to Southern California with her daughter Katherine and lived with friend Grace Ellery Channing In 1888 Charlotte separated from her husband a rare occurrence in the late nineteenth century They officially divorced in 1894 After their divorce Stetson married Channing 14 15 During the year she left her husband Charlotte met Adeline Knapp called Delle Cynthia J Davis describes how the two women had a serious relationship She writes that Gilman believed that in Delle she had found a way to combine loving and living and that with a woman as life mate she might more easily uphold that combination than she would in a conventional heterosexual marriage The relationship ultimately came to an end 16 17 Following the separation from her husband Charlotte moved with her daughter to Pasadena California where she became active in several feminist and reformist organizations such as the Pacific Coast Women s Press Association the Woman s Alliance the Economic Club the Ebell Society named after Adrian John Ebell the Parents Association and the State Council of Women in addition to writing and editing the Bulletin a journal put out by one of the earlier mentioned organizations 18 In 1894 Gilman sent her daughter east to live with her former husband and his second wife her friend Grace Ellery Channing Gilman reported in her memoir that she was happy for the couple since Katharine s second mother was fully as good as the first and perhaps better in some ways 19 Gilman also held progressive views about paternal rights and acknowledged that her ex husband had a right to some of Katharine s society and that Katharine had a right to know and love her father 20 After her mother died in 1893 Gilman decided to move back east for the first time in eight years She contacted Houghton Gilman her first cousin whom she had not seen in roughly fifteen years who was a Wall Street attorney They began spending a significant amount of time together almost immediately and became romantically involved While she would go on lecture tours Houghton and Charlotte would exchange letters and spend as much time as they could together before she left In her diaries she describes him as being pleasurable and it is clear that she was deeply interested in him 21 From their wedding in 1900 until 1922 they lived in New York City Their marriage was nothing like her first one In 1922 Gilman moved from New York to Houghton s old homestead in Norwich Connecticut Following Houghton s sudden death from a cerebral hemorrhage in 1934 Gilman moved back to Pasadena California where her daughter lived 22 In January 1932 Gilman was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer 23 An advocate of euthanasia for the terminally ill Gilman died by suicide on August 17 1935 by taking an overdose of chloroform In both her autobiography and suicide note she wrote that she chose chloroform over cancer and she died quickly and quietly 22 Career editAt one point Gilman supported herself by selling soap door to door After moving to Pasadena Gilman became active in organizing social reform movements As a delegate she represented California in 1896 at both the National American Woman Suffrage Association convention in Washington D C and the International Socialist and Labor Congress in London 24 In 1890 she was introduced to Nationalist Clubs movement which worked to end capitalism s greed and distinctions between classes while promoting a peaceful ethical and truly progressive human race Published in the Nationalist magazine her poem Similar Cases was a satirical review of people who resisted social change and she received positive feedback from critics for it Throughout that same year 1890 she became inspired enough to write fifteen essays poems a novella and the short story The Yellow Wallpaper Her career was launched when she began lecturing on Nationalism and gained the public s eye with her first volume of poetry In This Our World published in 1893 25 As a successful lecturer who relied on giving speeches as a source of income her fame grew along with her social circle of similar minded activists and writers of the feminist movement The Yellow Wallpaper edit nbsp The Yellow Wallpaper one of Gilman s most popular works originally published in 1892 before her marriage to George Houghton Gilman In 1890 Gilman wrote her short story The Yellow Wallpaper 26 which is now the all time best selling book of the Feminist Press 27 She wrote it on June 6 and 7 1890 in her home of Pasadena and it was printed a year and a half later in the January 1892 issue of The New England Magazine 1 Since its original printing it has been anthologized in numerous collections of women s literature American literature and textbooks 28 though not always in its original form For instance many textbooks omit the phrase in marriage from a very important line in the beginning of story John laughs at me of course but one expects that in marriage The reason for this omission is a mystery as Gilman s views on marriage are made clear throughout the story The story is about a woman who suffers from mental illness after three months of being closeted in a room by her husband for the sake of her health She becomes obsessed with the room s revolting yellow wallpaper Gilman wrote this story to change people s minds about the role of women in society illustrating how women s lack of autonomy is detrimental to their mental emotional and even physical wellbeing This story was inspired by her treatment from her first husband 29 The narrator in the story must do as her husband who is also her doctor demands although the treatment he prescribes contrasts directly with what she truly needs mental stimulation and the freedom to escape the monotony of the room to which she is confined The Yellow Wallpaper was essentially a response to the doctor Dr Silas Weir Mitchell who had tried to cure her of her depression through a rest cure She sent him a copy of the story 30 Other notable works edit nbsp Charlotte Perkins Gilman pictured wrote these articles about feminism for the Atlanta Constitution published on December 10 1916 Gilman s first book was Art Gems for the Home and Fireside 1888 however it was her first volume of poetry In This Our World 1893 a collection of satirical poems that first brought her recognition During the next two decades she gained much of her fame with lectures on women s issues ethics labor human rights and social reform 1 Her lecture tours took her across the United States 1 She often referred to these themes in her fiction 22 In 1894 95 Gilman served as editor of the magazine The Impress a literary weekly that was published by the Pacific Coast Women s Press Association formerly the Bulletin For the twenty weeks the magazine was printed she was consumed in the satisfying accomplishment of contributing its poems editorials and other articles The short lived paper s printing came to an end as a result of a social bias against her lifestyle which included being an unconventional mother and a woman who had divorced a man 31 After a four month long lecture tour that ended in April 1897 Gilman began to think more deeply about sexual relationships and economics in American life eventually completing the first draft of Women and Economics 1898 This book discussed the role of women in the home arguing for changes in the practices of child raising and housekeeping to alleviate pressures from women and potentially allow them to expand their work to the public sphere 32 The book was published in the following year and propelled Gilman into the international spotlight 33 In 1903 she addressed the International Congress of Women in Berlin The next year she toured in England the Netherlands Germany Austria and Hungary In 1903 she wrote one of her most critically acclaimed books The Home Its Work and Influence which expanded upon Women and Economics proposing that women are oppressed in their home and that the environment in which they live needs to be modified in order to be healthy for their mental states In between traveling and writing her career as a literary figure was secured 34 From 1909 to 1916 Gilman single handedly wrote and edited her own magazine The Forerunner in which much of her fiction appeared By presenting material in her magazine that would stimulate thought arouse hope courage and impatience and express ideas which need a special medium she aimed to go against the mainstream media which was overly sensational 35 Over seven years and two months the magazine produced eighty six issues each twenty eight pages long The magazine had nearly 1 500 subscribers and featured such serialized works as What Diantha Did 1910 The Crux 1911 Moving the Mountain 1911 and Herland The Forerunner has been cited as being perhaps the greatest literary accomplishment of her long career 36 After its seven years she wrote hundreds of articles that were submitted to the Louisville Herald The Baltimore Sun and the Buffalo Evening News Her autobiography The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman which she began to write in 1925 appeared posthumously in 1935 37 Rest cure treatment editPerkins Gilman married Charles Stetson in 1884 and less than a year later gave birth to their daughter Katharine Already susceptible to depression her symptoms were exacerbated by marriage and motherhood A good proportion of her diary entries from the time she gave birth to her daughter until several years later describe the oncoming depression that she was to face 38 On April 18 1887 Gilman wrote in her diary that she was very sick with some brain disease which brought suffering that cannot be felt by anybody else to the point that her mind has given way 39 To begin the patient could not even leave her bed read write sew talk or feed herself 40 After nine weeks Gilman was sent home with Mitchell s instructions Live as domestic a life as possible Have your child with you all the time Lie down an hour after each meal Have but two hours intellectual life a day And never touch pen brush or pencil as long as you live She tried for a few months to follow Mitchell s advice but her depression deepened and Gilman came perilously close to a full emotional collapse 41 Her remaining sanity was on the line and she began to display suicidal behavior that involved talk of pistols and chloroform as recorded in her husband s diaries By early summer the couple had decided that a divorce was necessary for her to regain sanity without affecting the lives of her husband and daughter 15 During the summer of 1888 Charlotte and Katharine spent time in Bristol Rhode Island away from Walter and it was there where her depression began to lift She writes of herself noticing positive changes in her attitude She returned to Providence in September She sold property that had been left to her in Connecticut and went with a friend Grace Channing to Pasadena where the recovery of her depression can be seen through the transformation of her intellectual life 20 Social views and theories editReform Darwinism and the role of women in society edit Gilman called herself a humanist and believed the domestic environment oppressed women through the patriarchal beliefs upheld by society 42 Gilman embraced the theory of reform Darwinism and argued that Darwin s theories of evolution presented only the male as the given in the process of human evolution thus overlooking the origins of the female brain in society that rationally chose the best suited mate that they could find Gilman argued that male aggressiveness and maternal roles for women were artificial and no longer necessary for survival in post prehistoric times She wrote There is no female mind The brain is not an organ of sex Might as well speak of a female liver 43 Her main argument was that sex and domestic economics went hand in hand for a woman to survive she was reliant on her sexual assets to please her husband so that he would financially support his family From childhood young girls are forced into a social constraint that prepares them for motherhood by the toys that are marketed to them and the clothes designed for them She argued that there should be no difference in the clothes that little girls and boys wear the toys they play with or the activities they do and described tomboys as perfect humans who ran around and used their bodies freely and healthily 44 Gilman argued that women s contributions to civilization throughout history have been halted because of an androcentric culture She believed that womankind was the underdeveloped half of humanity and improvement was necessary to prevent the deterioration of the human race 45 Gilman believed economic independence is the only thing that could really bring freedom for women and make them equal to men In 1898 she published Women and Economics a theoretical treatise which argued among other things that women are subjugated by men that motherhood should not preclude a woman from working outside the home and that housekeeping cooking and child care would be professionalized 46 The ideal woman Gilman wrote was not only assigned a social role that locked her into her home but she was also expected to like it to be cheerful and gay smiling and good humored When the sexual economic relationship ceases to exist life on the domestic front would certainly improve as frustration in relationships often stems from the lack of social contact that the domestic wife has with the outside world 47 Gilman became a spokesperson on topics such as women s perspectives on work dress reform and family Housework she argued should be equally shared by men and women and that at an early age women should be encouraged to be independent In many of her major works including The Home 1903 Human Work 1904 and The Man Made World 1911 Gilman also advocated women working outside of the home 48 Gilman argued that the home should be socially redefined The home should shift from being an economic entity where a married couple live together because of the economic benefit or necessity to a place where groups of men and groups of women can share in a peaceful and permanent expression of personal life 49 Gilman believed having a comfortable and healthy lifestyle should not be restricted to married couples all humans need a home that provides these amenities She suggested that a communal type of housing open to both males and females consisting of rooms rooms of suites and houses should be constructed This would allow individuals to live singly and still have companionship and the comforts of a home Both males and females would be totally economically independent in these living arrangements allowing for marriage to occur without either the male or the female s economic status having to change The structural arrangement of the home is also redefined by Gilman She removes the kitchen from the home leaving rooms to be arranged and extended in any form and freeing women from the provision of meals in the home The home would become a true personal expression of the individual living in it Ultimately the restructuring of the home and manner of living will allow individuals especially women to become an integral part of the social structure in close direct permanent connection with the needs and uses of society That would be a dramatic change for women who generally considered themselves restricted by family life built upon their economic dependence on men 50 Feminism in stories and novellas edit Gilman created a world in many of her stories with a feminist point of view Two of her narratives What Diantha Did and Herland are good examples of Gilman focusing her work on how women are not just stay at home mothers they are expected to be they are also people who have dreams who are able to travel and work just as men do and whose goals include a society where women are just as important as men The world building that is executed by Gilman as well as the characters in these two stories and others embody the change that was needed in the early 1900s in a way that is now commonly seen as feminism Gilman uses world building in Herland to demonstrate the equality that she longed to see The women of Herland are the providers This makes them appear to be the dominant sex taking over the gender roles that are typically given to men Elizabeth Keyser notes In Herland the supposedly superior sex becomes the inferior or disadvantaged 51 In this society Gilman makes it to where women are focused on having leadership within the community fulfilling roles that are stereotypically seen as being male roles and running an entire community without the same attitudes that men have concerning their work and the community However the attitude men carried concerning women were degrading especially by progressive women like Gilman Using Herland Gilman challenged this stereotype and made the society of Herland a type of paradise Gilman uses this story to confirm the stereotypically devalued qualities of women are valuable show strength and shatters traditional utopian structure for future works 52 Essentially Gilman creates Herland s society to have women hold all the power showing more equality in this world alluding to changes she wanted to see in her lifetime Gilman s feministic approach differs from Herland in What Diantha Did One character in this story Diantha breaks through the traditional expectation of women showing Gilman s desires for what a woman would be able to do in real life society Throughout the story Gilman portrays Diantha as a character who strikes through the image of businesses in the U S who challenges gender norms and roles and who believed that women could provide the solution to the corruption in big business in society 53 Gilman chooses to have Diantha choose a career that is stereotypically not one a woman would have because in doing so she is showing that the salaries and wages of traditional women s jobs are unfair Diantha s choice to run a business allows her to come out of the shadows and join society Gilman s works especially her work with What Diantha Did are a call for change a battle cry that would cause panic in men and power in women 54 Gilman used her work as a platform for a call to change as a way to reach women and have them begin the movement toward freedom Race edit In 1908 Gilman wrote an article in the American Journal of Sociology in which she set out her views on what she perceived to be a sociological problem concerning the presence of a large Black American minority in America Calling Black Americans a large body of aliens whose skin color made them widely dissimilar and in many respects inferior Gilman claimed that the economic and social situation of Black Americans was to us a social injury and noted that slavery meant that it was the responsibility of White Americans to alleviate this situation observing that if White Americans cannot so behave as to elevate and improve Black Americans then it would be the case that White Americans would need some scheme of race betterment rather than vice versa 55 Gilman was unequivocal about the ills of slavery and the wrongs which many White Americans had done to Black Americans stating that irrespective of any crimes committed by Black Americans Whites were the original offender and have a list of injuries to Black Americans greatly outnumbering the counter list She proposed that those Black Americans who were not self supporting or who were actual criminals which she clearly distinguished from the decent self supporting progressive negroes could be enlisted into a quasi military state labour force which she viewed as akin to conscription in certain countries Such force would be deployed in modern agriculture and infrastructure and those who had eventually acquired adequate skills and training would be graduated with honor Gilman believed that any such conscription should be compulsory at the bottom perfectly free at the top Gilman s racism lead her to espouse eugenicist beliefs claiming that Old Stock Americans were surrendering their country to immigrants who were diluting the nation s racial purity 56 When asked about her stance on the matter during a trip to London she declared I am an Anglo Saxon before everything 57 In an effort to gain the vote for all women she spoke out against literacy voting tests at the 1903 National American Woman Suffrage Association convention in New Orleans 58 Literary critic Susan S Lanser says The Yellow Wallpaper should be interpreted by focusing on Gilman s racism 59 Other literary critics have built on Lanser s work to understand Gilman s ideas in relation to turn of the century culture more broadly 60 61 Animals edit Gilman s feminist works often included stances and arguments for reforming the use of domesticated animals 62 In Herland Gilman s utopian society excludes all domesticated animals including livestock Additionally in Moving the Mountain Gilman addresses the ills of animal domestication related to inbreeding In When I Was a Witch the narrator witnesses and intervenes in instances of animal use as she travels through New York liberating work horses cats and lapdogs by rendering them comfortably dead One literary scholar connected the regression of the female narrator in The Yellow Wallpaper to the parallel status of domesticated felines 63 She wrote in a letter to the Saturday Evening Post that the automobile would eliminate the cruelty to horses used to pull carriages and cars 64 Critical reception edit The Yellow Wallpaper was initially met with a mixed reception One anonymous letter submitted to the Boston Transcript read The story could hardly it would seem give pleasure to any reader and to many whose lives have been touched through the dearest ties by this dread disease it must bring the keenest pain To others whose lives have become a struggle against heredity of mental derangement such literature contains deadly peril Should such stories be allowed to pass without severest censure 65 Positive reviewers describe it as impressive because it is the most suggestive and graphic account of why women who live monotonous lives are susceptible to mental illness 66 Although Gilman had gained international fame with the publication of Women and Economics in 1898 by the end of World War I she seemed out of tune with her times In her autobiography she admitted that unfortunately my views on the sex question do not appeal to the Freudian complex of today nor are people satisfied with a presentation of religion as a help in our tremendous work of improving this world 67 Ann J Lane writes in Herland and Beyond that Gilman offered perspectives on major issues of gender with which we still grapple the origins of women s subjugation the struggle to achieve both autonomy and intimacy in human relationships the central role of work as a definition of self new strategies for rearing and educating future generations to create a humane and nurturing environment 68 Bibliography editGilman s works include 69 Poetry collections edit In This Our World 1st ed Oakland McCombs amp Vaughn 1893 London T Fisher Unwin 1895 2nd ed San Francisco Press of James H Barry 1895 Suffrage Songs and Verses New York Charlton Co 1911 Microfilm New Haven Research Publications 1977 History of Women 6558 The Later Poetry of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Newark DE University of Delaware Press 1996 Short stories edit Gilman published 186 short stories in magazines newspapers and many were published in her self published monthly The Forerunner Many literary critics have ignored these short stories 70 Circumstances Alter Cases Kate Field s Washington July 23 1890 55 56 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford University Press 1995 32 38 That Rare Jewel Women s Journal May 17 1890 158 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 20 24 The Unexpected Kate Field s Washington May 21 1890 335 6 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 25 31 An Extinct Angel Kate Field s Washington September 23 1891 199 200 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 48 50 The Giant Wistaria New England Magazine 4 1891 480 85 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 39 47 The Yellow Wall paper New England Magazine 5 1892 647 56 Boston Small Maynard amp Co 1899 NY Feminist Press 1973 Afterword Elaine Hedges Oxford Oxford UP 1995 Introduction Robert Shulman The Rocking Chair Worthington s Illustrated 1 1893 453 59 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 51 61 An Elopement San Francisco Call July 10 1893 1 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 66 68 Deserted San Francisco Call July 17 1893 1 2 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 62 65 Through This Kate Field s Washington September 13 1893 166 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 69 72 A Day s Berryin Impress October 13 1894 4 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 78 82 Five Girls Impress December 1 1894 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 83 86 One Way Out Impress December 29 1894 4 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 87 91 The Misleading of Pendleton Oaks Impress October 6 1894 4 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 73 77 An Unnatural Mother Impress February 16 1895 4 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 98 106 An Unpatented Process Impress January 12 1895 4 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 92 97 According to Solomon Forerunner 1 2 1909 1 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 122 129 Three Thanksgivings Forerunner 1 1909 5 12 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 107 121 What Diantha Did A NOVEL Forerunner 1 1909 11 NY Charlton Co 1910 London T Fisher Unwin 1912 The Cottagette Forerunner 1 10 1910 1 5 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 130 138 When I Was a Witch Forerunner 1 1910 1 6 The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader Ed Ann J Lane NY Pantheon 1980 21 31 In Two Houses Forerunner 2 7 1911 171 77 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 159 171 Making a Change Forerunner 2 12 1911 311 315 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 182 190 Moving the Mountain Forerunner 2 1911 NY Charlton Co 1911 The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader Ed Ann J Lane NY Pantheon 1980 178 188 The Crux A NOVEL Forerunner 2 1910 NY Charlton Co 1911 The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader Ed Ann J Lane NY Pantheon 1980 116 122 The Jumping off Place Forerunner 2 4 1911 87 93 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 148 158 The Widow s Might Forerunner 2 1 1911 3 7 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 139 147 Turned Forerunner 2 9 1911 227 32 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 182 191 Mrs Elder s Idea Forerunner 3 2 1912 29 32 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 191 199 Their House Forerunner 3 12 1912 309 14 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 200 209 A Council of War Forerunner 4 8 1913 197 201 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 235 243 Bee Wise Forerunner 4 7 1913 169 173 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 226 234 Her Beauty Forerunner 4 2 1913 29 33 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 210 217 Mrs Hines s Money Forerunner 4 4 1913 85 89 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 218 226 A Partnership Forerunner 5 6 1914 141 45 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 253 261 Begnina Machiavelli A NOVEL Forerunner 5 1914 NY Such and Such Publishing 1998 Fulfilment Forerunner 5 3 1914 57 61 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 If I Were a Man Physical Culture 32 1914 31 34 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 262 268 Mr Peebles s Heart Forerunner 5 9 1914 225 29 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 269 276 Dr Clair s Place Forerunner 6 6 1915 141 45 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 295 303 Girls and Land Forerunner 6 5 1915 113 117 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 286 294 Herland A NOVEL Forerunner 6 1915 NY Pantheon Books 1979 Mrs Merrill s Duties Forerunner 6 3 1915 57 61 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 277 285 A Surplus Woman Forerunner 7 5 1916 113 18 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 304 313 Joan s Defender Forerunner 7 6 1916 141 45 The Yellow Wall Paper and Other Stories Ed Robert Shulman Oxford Oxford UP 1995 314 322 The Girl in the Pink Hat Forerunner 7 1916 39 46 The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader Ed Ann J Lane NY Pantheon 1980 39 45 With Her in Ourland Sequel to Herland A NOVEL Forerunner 7 1916 Westport Greenwood Publishing Group 1997 Novels and novellas edit What Diantha Did Forerunner 1909 10 The Crux Forerunner 1911 Moving the Mountain Forerunner 1911 Mag Marjorie Forerunner 1912 Won Over Forerunner 1913 Benigna Machiavelli Forerunner 1914 Herland Forerunner 1915 With Her in Ourland Forerunner 1916 Unpunished Ed Catherine J Golden and Denise D Knight New York Feminist Press 1997 Drama dialogues edit The majority of Gilman s dramas are inaccessible as they are only available from the originals Some were printed reprinted in Forerunner however Dame Nature Interviewed on the Woman Question as It Looks to Her Kate Field s Washington 1890 138 40 The Twilight Impress November 10 1894 4 5 Story Studies Impress November 17 1894 5 The Story Guessers Impress November 24 1894 5 Three Women Forerunner 2 1911 134 Something to Vote For Forerunner 2 1911 143 53 The Ceaseless Struggle of Sex A Dramatic View Kate Field s Washington April 9 1890 239 40 Non fiction edit Women and Economics A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution Boston Small Maynard amp Co 1898 Book length edit His Religion and Hers A Study of the Faith of Our Fathers and the Work of Our Mothers NY and London Century Co 1923 London T Fisher Unwin 1924 Westport Hyperion Press 1976 Gems of Art for the Home and Fireside Providence J A and R A Reid 1888 Concerning Children Boston Small Maynard amp Co 1900 The Home Its Work and Influence New York McClure Phillips amp Co 1903 Human Work New York McClure Phillips amp Co 1904 The Man Made World or Our Androcentric Culture New York Charton Co 1911 Our Brains and What Ails Them Serialized in Forerunner 1912 Social Ethics Serialized in Forerunner 1914 Our Changing Morality Ed Freda Kirchway NY Boni 1930 53 66 Short and serial non fiction edit On Advertising for Marriage The Alpha 11 September 1 1885 7 Why Women Do Not Reform Their Dress Woman s Journal October 9 1886 338 A Protest Against Petticoats Woman s Journal January 8 1887 60 The Providence Ladies Gymnasium Providence Journal 8 1888 2 How Much Must We Read Pacific Monthly 1 1889 43 44 Altering Human Nature California Nationalist May 10 1890 10 Are Women Better Than Men Pacific Monthly 3 1891 9 11 A Lady on the Cap and Apron Question Wasp June 6 1891 3 The Reactive Lies of Gallantry Belford s ns 2 1892 205 8 The Vegetable Chinaman Housekeeper s Weekly June 24 1893 3 The Saloon and Its Annex Stockton Mail 4 1893 4 The Business League for Women Impress 1 1894 2 Official Report of Woman s Congress Impress 1 1894 3 John Smith and Armenia Impress January 12 1895 2 3 The American Government Woman s Column June 6 1896 3 When Socialism Began American Fabian 3 1897 1 2 Causes and Uses of the Subjection of Women Woman s Journal December 24 1898 410 The Automobile as a Reformer Saturday Evening Post June 3 1899 778 Superfluous Women Women s Journal April 7 1900 105 Esthetic Dyspepsia Saturday Evening Post August 4 1900 12 Ideals of Child Culture Child Stude For Mothers and Teachers Ed Margaret Sangster Philadelphia Booklovers Library 1901 93 101 Should Wives Work Success 5 1902 139 Fortschritte der Frauen in Amerika Neues Frauenleben 1 1 1903 2 5 The Passing of the Home in Great American Cities Cosmopolitan 38 1904 137 47 The Beauty of a Block Independent July 14 1904 67 72 The Home and the Hospital Good Housekeeping 40 1905 9 Some Light on the Single Woman s Problem American Magazine 62 1906 4270428 Why Cooperative Housekeeping Fails Harper s Bazaar 41 July 1907 625 629 Social Darwinism American Journal of Sociology 12 1907 713 14 A Suggestion on the Negro Problem American Journal of Sociology 14 1908 78 85 How Home Conditions React Upon the Family American Journal of Sociology 14 1909 592 605 Children s Clothing Harper s Bazaar 44 1910 24 On Dogs Forerunner 2 1911 206 9 Should Women Use Violence Pictorial Review 14 1912 11 78 79 How to Lighten the Labor of Women McCall s 40 1912 14 15 77 What Love Really Is Pictorial Review 14 1913 11 57 Gum Chewing in Public New York Times May 20 1914 12 5 A Rational Position on Suffrage At the Request of the New York Times Mrs Gilman Presents the Best Arguments Possible in Behalf of Votes for Women New York Times Magazine March 7 1915 14 15 What is Feminism Boston Sunday Herald Magazine September 3 1916 7 The Housekeeper and the Food Problem Annals of the American Academy 74 1917 123 40 Concerning Clothes Independent June 22 1918 478 483 The Socializing of Education Public April 5 1919 348 49 A Woman s Party Suffragist 8 1920 8 9 Making Towns Fit to Live In Century 102 1921 361 366 Cross Examining Santa Claus Century 105 1922 169 174 Is America Too Hospitable Forum 70 1923 1983 89 Toward Monogamy Nation June 11 1924 671 73 The Nobler Male Forum 74 1925 19 21 American Radicals New York Jewish Daily Forward 1 1926 1 Progress through Birth Control North American Review 224 1927 622 29 Divorce and Birth Control Outlook January 25 1928 130 31 Feminism and Social Progress Problems of Civilization Ed Baker Brownell NY D Van Nostrand 1929 115 42 Sex and Race Progress Sex in Civilization Eds V F Calverton and S D Schmalhausen NY Macaulay 1929 109 23 Parasitism and Civilized Vice Woman s Coming of Age Ed S D Schmalhausen NY Liveright 1931 110 26 Birth Control Religion and the Unfit Nation January 27 1932 108 109 The Right to Die Forum 94 1935 297 300 Self publications edit The Forerunner Seven volumes 1909 16 Microfiche NY Greenwood 1968 Selected lectures edit There are 90 reports of the lectures that Gilman gave in The United States and Europe 70 Club News Weekly Nationalist June 21 1890 6 Re On Human Nature Our Place Today Los Angeles Woman s Club January 21 1891 With Women Who Write San Francisco Examiner March 1891 3 3 Re The Coming Woman Safeguards Suggested for Social Evils San Francisco Call April 24 1892 12 4 The Labor Movement Alameda County Federation of Trades 1893 Alameda County CA Labor Union Meetings September 2 1892 Announcement Impress 1 1894 2 Re Series of Talks on Social Questions All the Comforts of a Home San Francisco Examiner May 22 1895 9 Re Simplicity and Decoration The Washington Convention Woman s Journal February 15 1896 49 50 Re California Woman Suffrage League Boston Advertiser November 10 1897 8 1 Re The Economic Basis of the Woman Question Bellamy Memorial Meeting American Fabian 4 1898 3 An Evening With Kipling Daily Argus March 14 1899 4 2 Scientific Training of Domestic Servants Women and Industrial Life Vol 6 of International Congress of Women of 1899 Ed Countess of Aberdeen London T Unwin Fisher 1900 109 Society and the Child Brooklyn Eagle December 11 1902 8 4 Woman and Work Popular Fallacy that They are a Leisure Class Says Mrs Gilman New York Tribune February 26 1903 7 1 A New Light on the Woman Question Woman s Journal April 25 1904 76 77 Straight Talk by Mrs Gilman is Looked For San Francisco Call July 16 1905 33 2 Women and Social Service Warren National American Woman Suffrage Association 1907 Higher Marriage Mrs Gilman s Plea New York Times December 29 1908 2 3 Three Women Leaders in Hub Boston Post December 7 1909 1 1 2 and 14 5 6 Warless World When Women s Slavery Ends San Francisco Examiner November 14 1910 4 1 Lecture Given by Mrs Gilman San Francisco Call November 15 1911 7 3 Re The Society Body and Soul Mrs Gilman Assorts Sins New York Times June 3 1913 3 8 Adam the Real Rib Mrs Gilman Insists New York Times February 19 1914 9 3 Advocates a World City New York Times January 6 1915 15 5 Re Arbitration of diplomatic disputes by an international agency The Listener Boston Transcript April 14 1917 14 1 Re Announcement of lecture series Great Duty for Women After War Boston Post February 26 1918 2 7 Mrs Gilman Urges Hired Mother Idea New York Times September 23 1919 36 1 2 Eulogize Susan B Anthony New York Times February 16 1920 15 6 Re Gilman and others eulogize Anthony on the centenary of her birth Walt Whitman Dinner New York Times June 1 1921 16 7 Gilman speaks at annual meeting of Whitman Society in New York Fiction of America Being Melting Pot Unmasked by CPG Dallas Morning News February 15 1926 9 7 8 and 15 8 Diaries journals biographies and letters edit Charlotte Perkins Gilman The Making of a Radical Feminist Mary A Hill Philadelphia Temple University Press 1980 A Journey from Within The Love Letters of Charlotte Perkins Gilman 1897 1900 Ed Mary A Hill Lewisburg Bucknill UP 1995 The Diaries of Charlotte Perkins Gilman 2 Vols Ed Denise D Knight Charlottesville University Press of Virginia 1994 Autobiography edit The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman An Autobiography New York and London D Appleton Century Co 1935 NY Arno Press 1972 and Harper amp Row 1975 Academic studies edit Allen Judith 2009 The Feminism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Sexualities Histories Progressivism University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 01463 0 Allen Polly Wynn 1988 Building Domestic Liberty Charlotte Perkins Gilman s Architectural Feminism University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 0 87023 627 X Berman Jeffrey The Unrestful Cure Charlotte Perkins Gilman and The Yellow Wallpaper In The Captive Imagination A Casebook on The Yellow Wallpaper edited by Catherine Golden New York Feminist Press 1992 pp 211 41 Carter Sanborn Kristin Restraining Order The Imperialist Anti Violence of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Arizona Quarterly 56 2 Summer 2000 1 36 Ceplair Larry ed Charlotte Perkins Gilman A Nonfiction Reader New York Columbia UP 1991 Davis Cynthia J Charlotte Perkins Gilman A Biography Stanford University Press 2010 568 pages major scholarly biography Davis Cynthia J and Denise D Knight Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Her Contemporaries Literary and Intellectual Contexts Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press 2004 Deegan Mary Jo Introduction With Her in Ourland Sequel to Herland Eds Mary Jo Deegan and Michael R Hill Westport CT Praeger 1997 1 57 Eldredge Charles C Charles Walter Stetson Color and Fantasy Lawrence Spencer Museum of Art The U of Kansas 1982 Ganobcsik Williams Lisa The Intellectualism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Evolutionary Perspectives on Race Ethnicity and Gender Charlotte Perkins Gilman Optimist Reformer Eds Jill Rudd and Val Gough Iowa City U of Iowa P 1999 Golden Catherine The Captive Imagination A Casebook on The Yellow Wallpaper New York Feminist Press 1992 Written to Drive Nails With Recalling the Early Poetry of Charlotte Perkins Gilman in Charlotte Perkins Gilman Optimist Reformer Eds Jill Rudd and Val Gough Iowa City U of Iowa P 1999 243 66 Gough Val In the Twinkling of an Eye Gilman s Utopian Imagination in A Very Different Story Studies on the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Eds Val Gough and Jill Rudd Liverpool Liverpool UP 1998 129 43 Gubar Susan She in Herland Feminism as Fantasy in Charlotte Perkins Gilman The Woman and Her Work Ed Sheryl L Meyering Ann Arbor UMI Research Press 1989 191 201 Hill Mary Armfield Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Journey From Within in A Very Different Story Studies on the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Eds Val Gough and Jill Rudd Liverpool Liverpool UP 1998 8 23 Hill Mary A Charlotte Perkins Gilman The Making of a Radical Feminist Temple University Press 1980 Horowitz Helen Lefkowitz Wild Unrest Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Making of The Yellow Wall Paper New York Oxford University Press 2010 Huber Hannah Charlotte Perkins Gilman Dictionary of Literary Biography Volume 381 Writers on Women s Rights and United States Suffrage edited by George P Anderson Gale pp 140 52 Huber Hannah The One End to Which Her Whole Organism Tended Social Evolution in Edith Wharton and Charlotte Perkins Gilman Critical Insights Edith Wharton edited by Myrto Drizou Salem Press pp 48 62 Karpinski Joanne B The Economic Conundrum in the Lifewriting of Charlotte Perkins Gilman in The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Ed Catherine J Golden and Joanne S Zangrando U of Delaware P 2000 35 46 Kessler Carol Farley Dreaming Always of Lovely Things Beyond Living Toward Herland Experiential foregrounding in The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Eds Catherine J Golden and Joanna Schneider Zangrando Newark U of Delaware P 2000 89 103 Knight Denise D Charlotte Perkins Gilman A Study of the Short Fiction Twayne Studies in Short Fiction Twayne Publishers 1997 Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Shadow of Racism American Literary Realism vol 32 no 2 2000 pp 159 169 JSTOR www jstor org stable 27746975 Introduction Herland The Yellow Wall Paper and Selected Writings New York Penguin 1999 Lane Ann J Gilman Charlotte Perkins American National Biography Online 2000 The Fictional World of Charlotte Perkins Gilman in The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader Ed Ann J Lane New York Pantheon 1980 Introduction Herland A Lost Feminist Utopian Novel by Charlotte Perkins Gilman 1915 Rpt New York Pantheon Books 1979 To Herland and Beyond The Life of Charlotte Perkins Gilman New York Pantheon 1990 Lanser Susan S Feminist Criticism The Yellow Wallpaper and the Politics of Color in America Feminist Studies Vol 15 No 3 Feminist Reinterpretations Reinterpretations of Feminism Autumn 1989 pp 415 441 JSTOR Reprinted in The Yellow Wallpaper Charlotte Perkins Gilman Eds Thomas L Erskine and Connie L Richards New Brunswick Rutgers UP 1993 225 256 Long Lisa A Herland and the Gender of Science in MLA Approaches to Teaching Gilman s The Yellow Wall Paper and Herland Eds Denise D Knight and Cynthia J David New York Modern Language Association of America 2003 125 132 Mitchell S Weir M D Camp Cure Nurse and Patient and Camp Cure Philadelphia Lippincott 1877 Wear and Tear or Hints for the Overworked 1887 New York Arno Press 1973 Oliver Lawrence J W E B Du Bois Charlotte Perkins Gilman and A Suggestion on the Negro Problem American Literary Realism vol 48 no 1 2015 pp 25 39 JSTOR www jstor org stable 10 5406 amerlitereal 48 1 0025 Oliver Lawrence J and Gary Scharnhorst Charlotte Perkins Gilman v Ambrose Bierce The Literary Politics of Gender in Fin de Siecle California Journal of the West July 1993 52 60 Palmeri Ann Charlotte Perkins Gilman Forerunner of a Feminist Social Science in Discovering Reality Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology Metaphysics Methodology and Philosophy of Science Eds Sandra Harding and Merrill B Hintikka Dordrecht Reidel 1983 97 120 Scharnhorst Gary Charlotte Perkins Gilman Boston Twayne 1985 Studies Gilman as writer Scharnhorst Gary and Denise D Knight Charlotte Perkins Gilman s Library A Reconstruction Resources for American Literary Studies 23 2 1997 181 219 Stetson Charles Walter Endure The Diaries of Charles Walter Stetson Ed Mary A Hill Philadelphia Temple UP 1985 Tuttle Jennifer S Rewriting the West Cure Charlotte Perkins Gilman Owen Wister and the Sexual Politics of Neurasthenia The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Eds Catherine J Golden and Joanna Schneider Zangrando Newark U of Delaware P 2000 103 121 Von Rosk Nancy Women Work and Cross Class Alliances in the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Working Women in American Literature 1865 1950 Miriam Gogol ed New York Rowman and Littlefield 2018 69 91 Wegener Frederick What a Comfort a Woman Doctor Is Medical Women in the Life and Writing of Charlotte Perkins Gilman In Charlotte Perkins Gilman Optimist Reformer Eds Jill Rudd amp Val Gough Iowa City U of Iowa P 1999 45 73 Weinbaum Alys Eve Writing Feminist Genealogy Charlotte Perkins Gilman Racial Nationalism and the Reproduction of Maternalist Feminism Feminist Studies 27 Summer 2001 271 30 Footnotes edit a b c d e Charlotte Perkins Gilman Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on June 23 2018 Retrieved August 21 2018 Gilman Charlotte Perkins National Women s Hall of Fame Retrieved April 30 2022 Gilman Living 10 Denise D Knight The Diaries of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Charlottesville VA University Press of Virginia 1994 xiv Polly Wynn Allen Building Domestic Liberty 1988 30 Gilman Autobiography 26 Gilman Autobiography Chapter 5 Gilman Autobiography 29 a b Kate Bolick The Equivocal Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman 2019 Charlotte Perkins Gilman The Lost Letters to Martha Luther Lane PDF betweenthecovers com Archived from the original PDF on February 14 2020 Retrieved February 13 2020 Gilman Autobiography 82 Katharine Beecher Stetson MacDowell studios macdowell org Gilman Autobiography 90 Channing Grace Ellery 1862 1937 Papers of Grace Ellery Channing 1806 1973 A Finding Aid Harvard University Library Retrieved March 24 2018 a b Knight Diaries 408 Davis Cynthia December 2005 Love and Economics Charlotte Perkins Gilman on The Woman Question PDF ATQ The American Transcendental Quarterly 19 4 242 248 Retrieved November 25 2018 Harrison Pat July 3 2013 The Evolution of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Radcliffe Magazine Harvard University Retrieved November 25 2018 Knight Diaries 525 Knight Diaries 163 a b Knight Diaries Knight Diaries 648 666 a b c Knight Diaries p 813 Polly Wynn Allen Building Domestic Liberty 54 Gilman Autobiography 187 198 Knight Diaries 409 Gale Cengage Learning 2016 A Study Guide for Charlotte Perkins Gilman s Herland p Introduction 5 ISBN 9781410348029 The Yellow Wall paper The Feminist Press Retrieved August 26 2018 Julie Bates Dock Charlotte Perkins Gilman s The Yellow Wall Paper and the History of Its Publication and Reception University Park PA The Pennsylvania State University Press 1998 p 6 Charlotte Perkins Gilman Dock Charlotte Perkins Gilman s The Yellow Wall Paper and the History of Its Publication and Reception pp 23 24 Knight Diaries 601 Charlotte Perkins Gilman Women and Economics in Alice S Rossi ed The Feminist Papers From Adams to de Beauvoir 1997 section 1 only 572 576 Knight Diaries 681 Knight Diaries 811 Sari Edelstein Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Yellow Newspaper Legacy 24 1 72 92 Retrieved October 28 2008 from GenderWatch GW database Document ID 1298797291 Knight Diaries 812 Allen Building Domestic Liberty 30 Knight Diaries 323 385 Knight Diaries 385 Knight Diaries 407 Gilman Autobiography 96 Ann J Lane To Herland and Beyond 230 Charlotte Perkins Gilman Women and Economics Boston MA Small Maynard amp Co 1898 Carl N Degler Charlotte Perkins Gilman on the Theory and Practice of Feminism American Quarterly Vol 8 No 1 Spring 1956 26 Davis and Knight Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Her Contemporaries 206 Gilman Women and Economics Degler Theory and Practice 27 Degler Theory and Practice 27 35 Gilman Charlotte Perkins 2005 Kolmar amp Bartkowski eds Feminist Theory Boston McGraw Hill p 114 ISBN 9780072826722 Gilman Charlotte Perkins 2005 Kolmar amp Bartkowski eds Feminist Theory Boston McGraw Hill pp 110 114 ISBN 9780072826722 Keyser Elizabeth 1992 Looking Backward From Herland to Gulliver s Travels G K Hall amp Company p 160 Donaldson Laura E March 1989 The Eve of De Struction Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Feminist Recreation of Paradise Women s Studies 16 3 4 378 doi 10 1080 00497878 1989 9978776 Fama Katherine A 2017 Domestic Data and Feminist Momentum The Narrative Accounting of Helen Stuart Campbell and Charlotte Perkins Gilman Studies in American Naturalism 12 1 319 doi 10 1353 san 2017 0006 S2CID 148635798 Seitler Dana March 2003 Unnatural Selection Mothers Eugenic Feminism and Charlotte Perkins Gilman s Regeneration Narratives American Quarterly 55 1 63 doi 10 1353 aq 2003 0001 S2CID 143831741 Gilman Charlotte Perkins July 1908 May 1909 A Suggestion on the Negro Problem The American Journal of Sociology 14 Retrieved April 24 2019 After her divorce from Stetson she began lecturing on Nationalism She was inspired from Edward Bellamy s utopian socialist romance Looking Backward Alys Eve Weinbaum Writing Feminist Genealogy Charlotte Perkins Gilman Racial Nationalism and the Reproduction of Maternalist Feminism Feminist Studies Vol 27 No 4 Summer 2001 pp 271 302 Accessed November 3 2008 Davis C 2010 Charlotte Perkins Gilman A Biography Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804738897 Retrieved November 15 2014 Allen Building Domestic Liberty 52 Susan S Lanser The Yellow Wallpaper and the Politics of Color in America Feminist Studies Vol 15 No 3 Feminist Reinterpretations Reinterpretations of Feminism Autumn 1989 pp 415 441 Accessed March 5 2019 Denise D Knight Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Shadow of Racism American Literary Realism Vol 32 No 2 Winter 2000 pp 159 169 accessed March 9 2019 Lawrence J Oliver W E B Du Bois Charlotte Perkins Gilman and A Suggestion on the Negro Problem American Literary Realism Vol 48 No 1 Fall 2015 pp 25 39 accessed March 5 2019 McKenna Erin 2012 Charlotte Perkins Gilman Women Animals and Oppression In Hamington Maurice Bardwell Jones Celia eds Contemporary Feminist Pragmatism New York Routledge Publishing ISBN 978 0 203 12232 7 Golden Catherine Fall 2007 Marking Her Territory Feline Behavior in The Yellow Wall Paper American Literary Realism 40 16 31 doi 10 1353 alr 2008 0017 S2CID 161505591 Stetson Charlotte Perkins June 3 1899 The Automobile as Reformer Saturday Evening Post 171 49 778 Retrieved March 14 2021 M D Perlious Stuff Boston Evening Transcript April 8 1892 p 6 col 2 in Julie Bates Dock Charlotte Perkins Gilman s The Yellow Wallpaper and the History of Its Publication and Reception University Park PA The Pennsylvania State University Press 1998 103 Henry B Blackwell Literary Notices The Yellow Wall Paper The Woman s Journal June 17 1899 p 187 in Julie Bates Dock Charlote Perkins Gilman s The Yellow Wall paper and the History of Its Publication and Reception University Park PA The Pennsylvania State University Press 1998 107 Gilman Living 184 Golden Catherine J and Joanna Zangrando The Mixed Legacy of Charlotte Perkins Gilman Newark University of Delaware P 2000 211 The bibliographic information is accredited to the Guide to Research Materials section of Kim Well s website Wells Kim Domestic Goddesses August 23 1999 Online Internet Accessed October 27 2008 Archived August 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b Kim Wells Domestic Goddesses Archived August 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine Women Writers net August 23 1999 www womenwriters net External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Charlotte Perkins Gilman nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Charlotte Perkins Gilman nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charlotte Perkins Gilman Charlotte Perkins Gilman Society Works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Internet Archive Works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Library of Congress with 107 library catalog records Charlotte Perkins Gilman at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database The Feminist Press Essays by Charlotte Perkins Gilman at Quotidiana org A Guide for Research Materials Charlotte Perkins Gilman Domestic Goddess Petri Liukkonen Charlotte Perkins Gilman Books and Writers Suffrage Songs and Verses Charlotte Perkins Gilman Papers Schlesinger Library Radcliffe Institute Harvard University Charlotte Perkins Gilman Digital Collection Schlesinger Library Radcliffe Institute Harvard University Charlotte Perkins Gilman Papers Rare Books Special Collections and Preservation River Campus Libraries University of RochesterAudio files edit The Yellow Wallpaper Suspense CBS radio 1948 2 short radio episodes of Gilman s writing California Colors and Matriatism from California Legacy Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charlotte Perkins Gilman amp oldid 1181683291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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