Sylvia Plath’s Confessional Poetry and Struggle with Depression Numerous people around the world suffer from some form of depression and the great American poet Sylvia Plath was no exception. Depression can be defined as a mood disorder that causes persistent feelings of inadequacy‚ sadness and loss of interest. Those who suffer from depression often have difficulty accomplishing everyday tasks and may feel as if life isn’t worth living anymore. Now considered a mental illness throughout America
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Living out in the Streets 1. Introduction * People who are homeless are not social inadequate. They are people without homes. * Besides Hawaii being a favorite residency and vacation spot for many people‚ the islands also have a large homeless population * Currently‚ more than 6‚000 people live on the streets in the entire state. * The number of homeless people increases by 61 percent since the year 2000 and about 11.5 percent are living in poverty * 3 major causes that
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Morning Song Questions 1. In your own words‚ outline what two aspects of motherhood are depicted in the poem. Stanzas 1-3 are purely the birth of the child and are not emotional and a sense of detachment between the mother and the child is evident‚ whereas the last three are the baby crying in the night and the other helping the baby‚ these stanzas show the more nurturing and happy aspects of motherhood. 2. The title of the poem is morning song. What figurative expression does Plath use to
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Conflicting Emotions of Sylvia Plath The speaker in the poem “Daddy” is someone who both fiercely hates her father but also passionately loves him. When she was younger‚ she compared her father to a god-like entity—always looking up to him and constantly seeking his approval. Her fierce hate towards her father stems from the deep rooted fear of him. The speaker is torn between these two polar emotions that have been constantly tormenting her and blames them on her unresolved emotions toward her
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Mad Girl’s Love Song‚ by Sylvia Plath‚ is a modern poem of love‚ loss‚ and distress. Sylvia’s intended purpose of this particular poem was to express the narrator’s dismay of a lost love. After awaiting his return‚ and finally giving up‚ she begins to wonder if she had only made him up on the whims of her imagination. Sylvia expresses the meaning of her poem through the use of a unique rhyme scheme‚ repetition‚ and a religious allusion. Sylvia’s rhyme scheme throughout this poem is called a “villanelle
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The works of both Atwood and Plath explore the subjugation of women through a second-wave feminist lens. Both use confessional narrative; however‚ Plath uses her own personal experiences of feeling trapped in the home only to be a wife and a mother‚ while Atwood takes us to an extreme theocratic dystopia where women are only useful for their bodies‚ their treatment justified through a religious framework. So whereas Plath examines control over women through controversial metaphors in her poetry‚
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Sylvia Plath’s "Daddy" Essay When Sylvia Plath’s father‚ Otto Plath‚ passed away in 1940‚ she was deeply devastated. Plath was only eight years old when her father died‚ and she was absconded with a large poignant hollowness. It was then that she began writing poetry as an outlet for her feelings. Many of Plath’s poems have been persuaded by experiences from her own life; "Daddy" is no concession. Throughout Sylvia Plath’s poem "Daddy"‚ she uses prevailing images to declare
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METAPHORS –SYLVIA PLATH I’m a riddle in nine syllables‚ An elephant‚ a ponderous house‚ A melon strolling on two tendrils. O red fruit‚ ivory‚ fine timbers! This loaf’s big with its yeasty rising. Money’s new-minted in this fat purse. I’m a means‚ a stage‚ a cow in calf. I’ve eaten a bag of green apples‚ Boarded the train there’s no getting off. Sylvia’s Plath’s “Metaphors” is about a woman feeling insignificant during the midst of her pregnancy. Striking imagery is used to explore
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Can a woman be true to one man? Is a pure and virtuous woman anywhere on the ends of the earth? John Donne‚ a poet of the Renaissance and a contemporary of Shakespeare’s ponders this dilemma in the poem "Song" or "Go and Catcha Falling Star". Structurally Donne is unique in the structure of the poem. The poem has a rhythm and a rhyme scheme a‚b‚a‚b‚c‚c‚d‚d‚d. With lines 7-8 Donne has two word lines which add impact to those words "And find/What wind"‚ "And swear/no where"‚ and "Yet she/Will be"
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Plato’s Symposium is a book of speeches given in honor of Eros‚ the god of love. Aristophanes‚ a comic poet‚ gives the first speech‚ and the second is given by Socrates. The first speech tells a humorous history of mankind and how it became “whole‚” addressing gender issues and sexuality. On a more serious note‚ the second speech addresses the origin of Eros and his use to humans. Before launching his speech‚ Aristophanes warns the group that his eulogy to love may be more absurd than funny
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