A wonderful close reading of the text. It would be extremely beneficial not only for the students but for anyone who is interested in field of women's writing. Kudos to the manner in which she has analysed the entire text within a span of even less than an hour...a great mix of professionalism and passion..looking forward to more of such interesting videos in future. And last but not the least, the quality of the video is any day better and more attractive than many professionally done academic videos of our time.
So beautifully in a simple manner you have interpreted the whole text, shows your love and passion for literature. We are really thankful to u for sharing your knowledge with us..
"there are so many of those creeping women" - here she might have hallucinating the past residents of that isolated room who were kept here before her for 'rest cure' purpose.😢
To me Jane.. Is Jane Eire. The character Is Bertha Mason Who doesn't have to burn to please moral codes or get out of the way. This story Is both about women Identiy and a postcolonial writing. Thanks for your videos, you are so inspiring!
I was facing too much difficulties to understand this one ... Thank you mam for this simple easy explanation... and mam it will be very helpful if you please make a suggestion for our 5th semester...
@@BisbainFutureDream1234 Anindya was my batch mate . In fact he was like a Messiah to us. You guys are so lucky to have him as your mentor. Say hi to him from me.
Mam greatly approched the idea of the text.. it was so great that time has passd but wishing to listening more about it.. one think i would like to add that some dictation note after the conceptual clearing will be best package
Why dictation note? I have written a full note and published it for you all. So just read that up and use in your answers. Here is the link to that detailed article by me: nibblepop.com/the-yellow-wallpaper-childbirth-madness-and-patriarchy/
Please upload the answer of this question Discuss the role of Anasuya and priyamvada in kalidasa'play Abhijnana sakuntalam ( question carrying 5 marks)
There may have numerous ways to interpret this text, but the way you interpreted was outstanding! Only one question, when would I learn to understand and interpret texts the way you do, ma'am?🤔 However, a cordial thanks for offering us such kind of effective video lesson.😊❤
You are already far better than what I was back in your age, back then we were never as bright as you guys. So don't worry. Just remember, the best things in my lecture are things that real life has taught me, not books. So be true to your feelings and try to relate to the characters in the books.
Dear, ma'am, I have some queries. Please reply at your convenience. In your written presentation, Gilman has been referred to as a ' Utopian feminist'. Why is it so? I wish to know if there is any symbolic significance of sunlight and moonlight in the story. Or are they just for creating the gothic ambiance? While reading the text, I found that the way she constructs sentences at times is strange. E.g.: "We go away to-morrow, ...." Is this fine or does that mean something else? Does that by any chance means that her language is failing? If so, why? While explaining the line " John is away all day, and even some nights when his cases are serious.", you said she is relieved at his absence because she is not very comfortable with him. But again, sometime later she says when John dismisses her complaints till the next morning, "" And you won't go away?" I asked gloomily." In this line, I felt she wants her husband's company. Isn't she a kind of a lonely wife? This yearning later subsides as she starts enjoying her time with her own self and she starts fearing his presence. And does John's frequent absence in the name of "serious cases" insinuate something else? Because later she blatantly calls his acts of love pretension -- " He asked me all sorts of question, too, and pretended to be very loving and kind". And he faints when his wife condition actually gets seriously out of his control. The narrator says, "I feel sure, John and Jennie are secretly affected by it." How does the wallpaper affect them? At another place, the narrator says, "I have found another funny thing, but I shan't tell it this time! It does not do to trust people too much." Why this sudden change in her attitude and mistrust towards even the dead paper which she had initially trusted? Again, initially she claimed to write on "dead paper", now suddenly she says, "people". As if she is expecting readership. Yet this is like a private diary writing not meant for public eye. I am facing difficulty in understanding this. Or is somewhere paper and wallpaper overlapping? At the end of your lecture, you suggested that the narrator is questioning our notion of madness. How? Is it by showing that in her insanity, she has gone past the loving facade of Jane and John and unearthed the dark truth of patriarchy? i.e., John becomes a "jailor", Jennie a "sly thing." So, she is the actual sane one of all? The last part of the narrative where she completely identifies with the woman behind the wall, how can she write an entry at all? Because, at that point, she has come out of her identity completely winning the tussle of her two selves, and she no longer associates with John, but he is any man to her. I am very confused about the narrator. The subhuman projection of woman here, does that suggest the patriarchal perspective? Inferiority of women? Some people suggest that the wallpaper of the Victorian period was made of elements that caused hallucination. Is it correct? Again, as the narrative progresses, the structure of the parts keep on changing. The first two and the last parts are relatively longer than those in between. The parts in between get progressively shorter. Why? Does that indicate decent to insanity or psychological turmoil? And at the beginning of the narrative, the imaginary woman creeps slowly and in later parts, very fast so much so, that the narrator cannot keep up with her. Why? Does the act of "gnawing" only mean simple destruction? I mean she is destroying specifically by biting. Has this term been used without any other significance to it? What does yellow symbolize in 'yellow odor" and everything that is yellow? Finally, how is she tragic? Is it because even after knowing the truth she could not get out of the barred room and destroy the immovable bed and wallpaper completely, and was reduced to that subhuman entity herself reestablishing the idea suggested by Woolf in "The Room of One's Own" regarding the failure of intellectual women in the context of Elizabethan women? She could not destroy the system alone. It destroyed her.
1.“It makes me think of English places that you read about…”- Why did the narrator say so? 2.“There is a delicious garden”- Comment on the word italicised by the narrator? Madam i can't write down the answer of this question please help me
A wonderful close reading of the text. It would be extremely beneficial not only for the students but for anyone who is interested in field of women's writing. Kudos to the manner in which she has analysed the entire text within a span of even less than an hour...a great mix of professionalism and passion..looking forward to more of such interesting videos in future. And last but not the least, the quality of the video is any day better and more attractive than many professionally done academic videos of our time.
Absolutely!
Your explanation and your pronunciation is wonderful 💓 thank you so much for this video it is really helpful for me 💞
So beautifully in a simple manner you have interpreted the whole text, shows your love and passion for literature. We are really thankful to u for sharing your knowledge with us..
Thank you so much ma'am for such a detailed analysis and wonderful explanation. Wish the channel grows and grows growsssss❤️
Loved it ma'am.
I must say you have levelled my critical understanding .
I keep on learning so much in Nibble Pop.
Thank you
Liza Laha
Thank you ma'am for providing us such an enriched lecture on this text..it's very much helpful for us.😊🙏🏻😊
Best teacher, love and respect from the other side of Kashmir.
The text has explained in a very simple way...thank you ma'am
"there are so many of those creeping women" - here she might have hallucinating the past residents of that isolated room who were kept here before her for 'rest cure' purpose.😢
@@Arijitworld1455 yes indeed
@@NibblePop OK ma'am
Hello ma'am at 36:55 wasn't she talking about the moon creeping in and not the woman?
You explained it beautifully..❤️ i understood the complete text.🙏 thankuuuu
I become a fan of your video
Such a great and detailed video
Thank you so much 💕
Thanks a lot for the explaination
Thank you madam for such a scintillating analysis of this text 🙏
To me Jane.. Is Jane Eire. The character Is Bertha Mason Who doesn't have to burn to please moral codes or get out of the way. This story Is both about women Identiy and a postcolonial writing. Thanks for your videos, you are so inspiring!
I loved it.Your voice touches the soul!!!!
I was facing too much difficulties to understand this one ... Thank you mam for this simple easy explanation... and mam it will be very helpful if you please make a suggestion for our 5th semester...
Will try doing that.
Aninda Sen sir now teaching us this same text i.e The Yellow Wallpaper. Thank you too ma'am for your wonderful explanation.
Silchar Assam University?
Yes ma'am........I am doing my Masters in Assam University.
@@BisbainFutureDream1234 Anindya was my batch mate . In fact he was like a Messiah to us. You guys are so lucky to have him as your mentor. Say hi to him from me.
U deserve more likes and shares because u explained it very well🥰
Brilliantly elaborated, mam thank you
Greatly explained mam❤❤❤
Thank you ❤️❤️... It's very helpful
Please ma'am make lecture on heart of darkness and Mrs Dalloway.Please maam
Well explained ! Thank you !
Thank you so much❤
thank you for this, I really appreciate it!
Thank you so much ma'am ❤️ u explained it really well 😌
Thanks ma'am 🎉
Mam greatly approched the idea of the text.. it was so great that time has passd but wishing to listening more about it.. one think i would like to add that some dictation note after the conceptual clearing will be best package
Why dictation note? I have written a full note and published it for you all. So just read that up and use in your answers.
Here is the link to that detailed article by me:
nibblepop.com/the-yellow-wallpaper-childbirth-madness-and-patriarchy/
Please upload the answer of this question
Discuss the role of Anasuya and priyamvada in kalidasa'play Abhijnana sakuntalam ( question carrying 5 marks)
Thankyou so much ma'am 🌹
Please give lecture on Geoffrey Chaucer knight and Prioress and also Daddy by Sylvia plath
Thank you so much 🦋
Ma'am please make video on the essay 'The Wheel' by G.K Chesterton and
Ma'am, how is the symbol of nursery related to reason? I didn't get it clearly
Thankyou ma'am
Excellent discussion.please tell about the ending of the yellow wallpaper.and what is the effect of rest cure on the narrator?
Thank you mam ❤
Pls video on amar jinon by rassundari devi
The women in white by Wilkie Collins next plz...
Ma'am please make a vdo on A Vindication of the Rights of Women.
Ma’am please do “Preface” by William Wordsworth
There may have numerous ways to interpret this text, but the way you interpreted was outstanding! Only one question, when would I learn to understand and interpret texts the way you do, ma'am?🤔 However, a cordial thanks for offering us such kind of effective video lesson.😊❤
You are already far better than what I was back in your age, back then we were never as bright as you guys. So don't worry. Just remember, the best things in my lecture are things that real life has taught me, not books.
So be true to your feelings and try to relate to the characters in the books.
@@NibblePop Thanks once again for your precious advice.❤
Why you're subtitles are in hindi can you please change it into English please ma'am 😢
Very Helpful
Thank you ma'am 😘😘😘
Plz make a video of Wide Sargasso Sea and Jane Eyre , specially the relationship between two novels. This is my humble request to you.
Will try
Asadharon laglo.
Best lecture..tysm mam
Give details discussion on Dropdi by Maheswata devi
Nice video mam. Thank you mam 😊😊
Thank you so very much ma'am ♥️ If it's possible , please suggest some questions from it .. 😊
Dear, ma'am, I have some queries. Please reply at your convenience.
In your written presentation, Gilman has been referred to as a ' Utopian feminist'. Why is it so?
I wish to know if there is any symbolic significance of sunlight and moonlight in the story. Or are they just for creating the gothic ambiance?
While reading the text, I found that the way she constructs sentences at times is strange. E.g.: "We go away to-morrow, ...." Is this fine or does that mean something else? Does that by any chance means that her language is failing? If so, why?
While explaining the line " John is away all day, and even some nights when his cases are serious.", you said she is relieved at his absence because she is not very comfortable with him. But again, sometime later she says when John dismisses her complaints till the next morning, "" And you won't go away?" I asked gloomily." In this line, I felt she wants her husband's company. Isn't she a kind of a lonely wife? This yearning later subsides as she starts enjoying her time with her own self and she starts fearing his presence.
And does John's frequent absence in the name of "serious cases" insinuate something else? Because later she blatantly calls his acts of love pretension -- " He asked me all sorts of question, too, and pretended to be very loving and kind". And he faints when his wife condition actually gets seriously out of his control.
The narrator says, "I feel sure, John and Jennie are secretly affected by it." How does the wallpaper affect them?
At another place, the narrator says, "I have found another funny thing, but I shan't tell it this time! It does not do to trust people too much." Why this sudden change in her attitude and mistrust towards even the dead paper which she had initially trusted?
Again, initially she claimed to write on "dead paper", now suddenly she says, "people". As if she is expecting readership. Yet this is like a private diary writing not meant for public eye. I am facing difficulty in understanding this. Or is somewhere paper and wallpaper overlapping?
At the end of your lecture, you suggested that the narrator is questioning our notion of madness. How? Is it by showing that in her insanity, she has gone past the loving facade of Jane and John and unearthed the dark truth of patriarchy? i.e., John becomes a "jailor", Jennie a "sly thing." So, she is the actual sane one of all?
The last part of the narrative where she completely identifies with the woman behind the wall, how can she write an entry at all? Because, at that point, she has come out of her identity completely winning the tussle of her two selves, and she no longer associates with John, but he is any man to her. I am very confused about the narrator.
The subhuman projection of woman here, does that suggest the patriarchal perspective? Inferiority of women?
Some people suggest that the wallpaper of the Victorian period was made of elements that caused hallucination. Is it correct? Again, as the narrative progresses, the structure of the parts keep on changing.
The first two and the last parts are relatively longer than those in between. The parts in between get progressively shorter. Why? Does that indicate decent to insanity or psychological turmoil?
And at the beginning of the narrative, the imaginary woman creeps slowly and in later parts, very fast so much so, that the narrator cannot keep up with her. Why?
Does the act of "gnawing" only mean simple destruction? I mean she is destroying specifically by biting. Has this term been used without any other significance to it?
What does yellow symbolize in 'yellow odor" and everything that is yellow?
Finally, how is she tragic? Is it because even after knowing the truth she could not get out of the barred room and destroy the immovable bed and wallpaper completely, and was reduced to that subhuman entity herself reestablishing the idea suggested by Woolf in "The Room of One's Own" regarding the failure of intellectual women in the context of Elizabethan women? She could not destroy the system alone. It destroyed her.
Ma'am plz give us the textual analysis of "AmarJibon " .
will certainly do this one.
Well explained...kudos to you and your hard work....wish u could made video on Alice Munro "Royal beating"
Will see if I can manage that
@@NibblePop indeed you can....the way u explained yellow paper ..it makes easy for beginners to understand
Please make video on murder in the cathedral
Magnificent
Share the notes.. Which u used in playlist plzz
nibblepop.com/the-yellow-wallpaper-childbirth-madness-and-patriarchy/
1.“It makes me think of English places that you read about…”- Why did the
narrator say so?
2.“There is a delicious garden”- Comment on the word italicised by the
narrator?
Madam i can't write down the answer of this question please help me
Thank u madam 😘
Best ❤
Beautiful presentation
Outstanding and brilliant lecture ever i found on you tube plz make a vedio on Shakespeare's sister,by Virginia volf and im wife Emily Dickinson
Mam I like your video
You are professor's professor
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙃🙃