User:Snoodle17/The Yellow Wallpaper (film)/Bibliography

The Yellow wallpaper possible sources

The yellow wall-paper - united states national library of medicine. (n.d.). Retrieved September 21, 2022, from https://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/theliteratureofprescription/exhibitionAssets/digitalDocs/The-Yellow-Wall-Paper.pdf

Kevanyu, N. (1997, February). Wallpaper as the Apotheosis of Womanhood? Yellow wallpaper paper. Retrieved September 21, 2022, from https://public.wsu.edu/~delahoyd/wallpaper.paper.html

CAROL MARGARET DAVISON (2004) Haunted House/Haunted Heroine: Female Gothic Closets in “The Yellow Wallpaper”, Women's Studies, 33:1, 47-75, DOI: 10.1080/00497870490267197

Weatherford, J. (1999). Approaching the Ineffable:" The Yellow Wallpaper" and Gilman's Problem with Language. American Studies in Scandinavia, 31(2), 58-75.

MURTHY, A. (2021). The Symbol of the Wallpaper: Subjectivity and Agency in Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper”. A JOURNAL OF THE YIF CRITICAL WRITING PROGRAMME.

Gilman, C. P. (2011). Why I wrote The Yellow Wallpaper?. Advances in psychiatric treatment, 17(4), 265-265.

Quawas, R. (2006). A new woman's journey into insanity: Descent and return in the yellow wallpaper. Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association, 2006(105), 35-53.

The Yellow Wallpaper film references

Beer, J. (1997). ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’on Film: Dramatising Mental Illness. In Kate Chopin, Edith Wharton and Charlotte Perkins Gilman (pp. 197-213). Palgrave Macmillan, London.

Grossman, J. (2015). The Quiet Presence of “The Yellow Wallpaper” in Todd Haynes’s Film [Safe]. In Literature, Film, and Their Hideous Progeny (pp. 105-125). Palgrave Macmillan, London.

Payne, R. (2013). The Fall of the Yellow Wallpaper. AWE (A Woman’s Experience), 1(1), 6.

Stern, J. (2020). Gender, Genre, and Thematic Expectation in Logan Thomas’ The Yellow Wallpaper: How Filmmakers Can Use Palimpsest against the Audience. HyperCultura, (9), 1-11.

Kröger, L. B., & Anderson, M. (Eds.). (2013). The ghostly and the ghosted in literature and film: Spectral identities. University of Delaware.