Application Paper: The Bell Jar The Bell Jar‚ a novel by Sylvia Plath‚ gives a detailed story of Esther Greenwood‚ a young‚ bright‚ and extremely talented young woman. The novel begins with Esther’s life in New York where she works for a magazine as an editor. Her time there is filled with stress from the other college girls in her dorm‚ a dwindling love life‚ and constant deliberation over the direction of her life. The novel chronicles how these stressors take an insidious form in her life‚ leading
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both The Bell Jar and A Brief History of Time‚ the authors utilize figurative language. In The Bell Jar‚ Esther is overcome with a sense of helplessness when she is checked into a mental asylum. In her demented mental state she says‚ “It wouldn’t have made once scrap of a difference to me‚ because wherever I sat... I would be sitting under the same glass bell jar‚ stewing in my own sour air" (Plath 185). Esther uses a metaphor to compare herself to an object “sitting under a glass bell jar.” The metaphor
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In The Bell Jar‚ Esther fails to think clearly‚ which leads to her emotional downfall. When Esther does not meet her own expectations‚ she loses hope. In addition‚ Esther constantly compares herself to others around her. Moreover‚ she believes that suicide will solve her problems. Esther’s unreasonable thoughts put her further under the bell jar. Esther has a realistic goal and a clear idea on what she wants to do with her life; she aspires to become a successful writer and is more than talented
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narration of Leo is both more personal and detailed than that of Esther. The reader sees the sophisticated world of Brandham Hall‚ contrasted with the closeness of Leo’s relationship with his mother‚ from Leo’s perspective. On the other hand‚ in The Bell-Jar the reader’s understanding of Esther’s life is limited by the cold and detached first person narrative‚ due to her descent into depression. It could be said that Esther is presented as repressing her emotions‚ yet her opinionated ways lead to her
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This is the extent to which her husband disregards her. This indifference of her husband whom she loves dearly‚ leads to her having physical relation with Joe. As in the case of The Bell Jar‚ in Surfacing too we have many mirror scenes. The various mirror scenes in the novel portrays the narrator’s distorted sense of self. She doesn’t have a positive self-image. She was very afraid of looking into the mirror. She felt that the dead were
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Yellow In The Yellow Wall-Paper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman‚ several symbols are used to show the oppression of women by men and the struggle against that male dominated society. While numerous symbols could be cited from the text to support this‚ there are three predominant symbols throughout the story that explain the woman’s suffrage theme. The yellow wallpaper itself is symbolic of the mental screen that men attempted to place on women. The color yellow is often associated with sickness or
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of mental instability in The Bell Jar and Ariel. The point of living has been a theme in literature that has been used on many occasions‚ Hamlet sums it up with the question “To be or not to be”. The myth of Sisyphus also investigates the real point in living. Plath’s work is an altogether more tortured catalogue of mental illness and summing up the answer to Camus’ question. [A] Plath expresses sequences of mental instability throughout her work‚ The Bell Jar often references this with the
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personal struggles and memories. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath is no different. The Bell Jar chronicles the journey of Esther‚a gifted writer‚ as she is sent into a spiraling depression until she is at the point of suicide. The book also chronicles her journey through recovery. The story told is not so different from what the author‚ Sylvia Plath‚ experienced in her youth. The experiences and beliefs of Sylvia Plath made an undeniable influence her novel The Bell Jar‚ making it a warped mirror of her
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1. Esther’s descends into depression gradually all through The Bell Jar. Chapter three exposes that her dad passed away when she was young‚ which makes the introduction of mental illness in her adulthood far more likely in it’s probable traumatic effect on her youthful mind. Also established early is Esther feeling jealousy towards Doreen’s livelihood. Her want is quickly diminished though‚ and the truth of her friend’s monetary inclinations as well as her sexual promiscuity are brought to light
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The Bell Jar - Esther Greenwood The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath has long been known as a haunting American classic. The protagonist of this timeless novel is Esther Greenwood. She travels through The Bell Jar with such intensity and purpose that her thoughts and actions are accessible and very easy to understand. Esther Greenwood is a talented woman who becomes increasingly confused and disturbed as the story progresses. Esther is described as a talented woman because of her exceptional intelligence
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