Emotionally Unavailable by Design: An Analysis of Narrator Reliability in Nevada and The Yellow Wallpaper

dc.contributor.authorSivakumar, Kalyani
dc.date.accessioned2025-09-16T21:22:34Z
dc.date.available2025-09-16T21:22:34Z
dc.date.issued2025-04-08
dc.descriptionThis essay won the H.K. Girling Literature Prize. The H.K. Girling Literature Prize was established in 2002 by friends and family in memory of Professor Harry K. Girling, a member of the York University English Department from 1962 to 1984. The prize is awarded annually, on the recommendation of the English Department, to a student enrolled in a 2000- or 3000-level English course. The recipient is selected on the basis of an outstanding essay written for that course, by a student who shows commitment to literature in both the classroom and in other ways.
dc.description.abstractWhat readers consider a “reliable” narrator often reveals more about their assumptions than about the narrator’s truthfulness. Imogen Binnie’s Nevada and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper prompt readers to critically examine their internalized biases regarding narrative reliability. Each text achieves this through distinct approaches to narrative structure, perspective, and the portrayal of emotional vulnerability. Nevada employs third-person indirect discourse to follow Maria on a road trip, while The Yellow Wallpaper unfolds through the first-person epistolary format of an unnamed narrator. Despite the immersive intimacy of the first-person voice, Gilman’s narrator remains unnamed. By contrast, Maria is named early, with her gender and social context made clear. Yet the narrative structure flattens her personhood through emotional detachment and stereotyping. The narrator of The Yellow Wallpaper appears more emotionally accessible and credible to readers, despite lacking the most basic marker of personhood—a name. Meanwhile, Maria is difficult to empathize with, due to the narrative distance mirroring her dissociation. This disparity raises important questions about whose pain is believed, and which ways of expressing that pain are accepted as valid or deserving of empathy in literature.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10315/43140
dc.language.isoen
dc.subjectSexism
dc.subjectQueer
dc.subjectFeminist
dc.subjectFeminism
dc.subjectTransphobia
dc.titleEmotionally Unavailable by Design: An Analysis of Narrator Reliability in Nevada and The Yellow Wallpaper
dc.typeOther

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