Sylvia Plath‚ is known for darker more depressing poetry style and free-verse writing technique. But‚ like plenty of other poets she uses figurative language. Metaphors is just one of the many types of figurative language. A metaphor is a figure of speech that identifies something as the same as some unrelated person/place/thing for verbal effect‚ thus stressing the similarities between the two. Many poets and authors use metaphors and also symbolism in their writing. In her work‚ Plath uses metaphors
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11 years old‚ Sylvia Plath‚ was an extraordinary girl with a troublesome mind. In 1962‚ shortly before her death Plath wrote one of her most significantly popular poems “Daddy”. This poem is about Path’s regards towards her father. It describes the relationship they had and how it affected her. Her fathers way of being did not only affect her during childhood but even after the day she got married to the end of her life. Upon reading‚ one can clearly imagine the way Sylvia Plath lived‚ and was burdened
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Sylvia Plath was a gifted writer‚ poet and verbal artist whose personal anguish and torment visibly manifested itself in her work. Much of her angst stems from her warped relationship with her father. Other factors that influenced her works were her strained views of human sexuality‚ her sado-masochistic tendencies‚ self-hatred and her traditional upbringing. She was labeled as a confessional poet and biographical and historical material is absolutely necessary to understand her work. Syliva Plath
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In chapter thirteen there is one specific passage that holds a lot of meaning. This passage uses personification with the sun and how it “[sent] up spies ahead of him to mark out the road through the dark‚ he peeped up over the door sill of the world and made and went about his business all dressed in white.” This example of personification makes the sun seem like a person. The sun looks over the “door sill of the world” which is another way to say the sun was coming up and it got rid of the darkness
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Symbolism of a Feminist Poem in Sylvia Plath Some literary critics have linked Sylvia Plath’s poem‚ “Daddy" (524)‚ as a confessional or autobiographical poem about the relationship with her father. Undoubtedly‚ she references her own personal life‚ however‚ “Daddy”‚ should not only be read in a narrow sense‚ as her intentions are to convey a more significant theme. The tone of the poem expresses a strong disdain towards not only her father and husband‚ but towards the male gender. It is arguable
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help create imagery. The first metaphor comes in the phrase‚ “The land rushed at him‚ a tidal wave”. This metaphor helps the reader understand how overwhelmed Bradbury is to be on land again after being in a river for so long. Bradbury also uses personification in the phrase‚ “He was crushed by darkness and the look of the country and the million odors on a wind that iced his body.” Bradbury gives darkness‚ the country‚ and smells the ability to crush Montag as well as ice him. Bradbury uses metaphor
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The Lacanian Mirror: Reflections on Oldboy According to Jacques Lacan in the “The Mirror Stage”‚ the stage is “an identification” in which the subject undergoes a transformation by assuming an image in the mirror (34). There is a “jubilant assumption of his specular image by the child” (34) as he admires the wholeness of the reflection and longs to identify with it. At the same time‚ however‚ the wholeness of the image is compared to the fragmented condition of the child’s body and is‚ thus‚ met
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learn to understand that there are punishments of society when one does not do what they should. The search for her identity and the acceptance of her truth has inspired women in future generations. Through the character of Esther Greenwood‚ Sylvia Plath explores the oppression felt by women in the 1950’s in her semibiographical novel The Bell Jar. Today‚ society’s expectations of women are nowhere similar to how they used to be back in the 1950s. Esther Greenwood writes The Bell Jar to protest her
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We usually think of religion as being redemptive‚ but here the symbols are oppressive. In ‘Lady Lazarus’ Plath expresses an awareness of the world that is underpinned by regret and sorrow‚ uneasiness and apprehension and in ‘Being Christlike ‘Hughes‚ expresses that same sense of regret and let down‚ apprehension and anxiety. Their resentment of failure is palpable. Both poets use twisted symbolism‚ provoking unease in the reader. They construct destructive symbols of neglect‚ abuse‚ cruelty and oppression
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__Lady Lazarus__ Sylvia Plath’s Lady Lazarus is an incredible metaphor of rebirth; the whole idea of a new life from death. Plath throughout her life was suicidal and many of her most famous works revolve around the ideas of death being a new beginning and a way of escaping enslavement from many various factors that bind us to life. There is nothing different about this poem from all of Plath’s other works. She as always represents her life troubles through a worldly event in this case the Holocaust
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