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2. How does the description of wallpaper change over time?
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Jen
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Jun 01, 2016 08:15AM

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She goes from hating the paper to seeing things in the paper. "There is a recurrent spot where the pattern lolls like a broken neck and two bulbous eyes stare at you upside down".


Jane ascribes personality to the wallpaper and imagines it is staring at her. Such impertinence angers her, but gradually she begins to develop a sort of Stockholm Syndrome about it. She spends so much time staring at it, following its patterns, that she starts to try to understand it.
She begins to see a woman imprisoned in the pattern, which is an acknowledgement of her own imprisonment. It spurs her to talk to John about her need to leave, but to no avail.
Jane is bored and all she really has to occupy her is studying the wallpaper. The colour ceases to be important. It's the complicated pattern that pulls in her inactive creativity. I remember being ill in bed as a child and spending hours studying the wallpaper in my bedroom. It was almost hallucinatory, trying to follow a pattern of embossed flowers to work out if there was a logic to it. Jane becomes obsessed with the changes the wallpaper undergoes in different light.