"Sylvia plaths poetry is deeply personal and quite disturbing" Essays and Research Papers

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    lived and the swastika "So black no sky could squeak through." Thus the specific and personal recollections ignite powerful associations with culturally significant symbols. The fact that the girl is herself "a bit of a Jew" and a bit of a German intensifies her emotional paralysis before the imago of an Aryan father with whom she is both connected and at enmity. Commenting on the persona in a BBC interview‚ Plath herself suggests that the two strains of Nazi and Jew unite in the daughter "and paralyze

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    TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis Title: What predictions can you make from the title? What might be the theme of the poem? The poem might have to do with plastic surgery. It might depict what women immediately pursue once they’ve reached the old stage in their life. Women tend to seek for youth all the time‚ because society has made women think that in order to get what they want in life they must look young and radiant. Paraphrase: In your own words‚ describe what happens in

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    Sylvia Plath uses startling imagery when writing about landscape’ I agree with this statement to a large extent. Sylvia Plath uses startling imagery to portray her heightened emotions using the nature around her to create her poems. Plath’s poems are mainly focused around the theme of death and depression. In Sylvia Plath’s poems‚ the rhythm is often non-up beat and uneven. This forms a more natural and vivid image of the nature and landscape around her. In addition‚ Plath’s use

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    Compare how Duffy & Plath present “Family relationships” in “Ariel & Mean Time” Carol Ann Duffy and Sylvia Plath have written aboutfamily relationships in a positive view as well as in a negative way too‚ in poems Medusa and Before you were mine‚ whether it’s about in favour or against family Love and relationships. In this extract there are four poems written by Carol Ann Duffy and Sylvia Plath. Which are‚ “Brothers” and “Lady Lazarus” including “Medusa” and “Before You Were Mine”. All four poems

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    Sexton and Sylvia Plath were both great minds‚ creative individuals‚ and some of the greatest poetic individuals of the twentieth century. Though Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath were great poets‚ they were also obsessed with death‚ darkness‚ and plagued with manic depression. They yearned for death‚ and both were able to achieve their life goal of dying. They’re poetry is a direct result of their morbid minds and the strange obsessions they shared during they’re several years of friendship. Sylvia Plath

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    Sylvia Plath is an American poet‚ novelist and short story writer who lived in London‚ United Kingdom. She is considered an important poet of her generation. Her work is very personal and towards the end of her life she often wrote about death. She usually used confessional genre to write her poetry. She is Best-known for her two published collections: The Colossus and Other Poetrys and Ariel. She also wrote a semi-autobiographical novel‚ The Bell Jar in 1963 published shortly before her death. The

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    of the classics sample from the author’s 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

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    Both Sylvia Plath and Penelope Lively explore situations that evoke the primal fear in all of us. They use various images and different symbols to explore these fears through neurosis‚ nightmares and hallucinations. “The blue capes all dissolved and vanished”‚ just like their childhood’s innocence. The whole dreamy fantasy world of the two main characters (Sandra‚ from ‘The Darkness Out there’ and the little girl from ‘Superman and Paula Brown’s New Snowsuit’) burnt into ashes by the antagonist.

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    lids and all is born again. (I think I made you up inside my head.)… -- Sylvia Plath‚ Smith College‚ 1954 The above metaphor appears in an amazing poem written by Sylvia Plath. It relates something everyone does everyday‚ blinking‚ and turns it into something so sorrowful and thoughtful and deep. When reading this poem‚ "Mad Girl’s Love Song‚" I get a glimpse of the immensely troubled yet astounding life that Plath led. Although she only had one book‚ The Bell Jar‚ published during her short

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    Sylvia Plath was once a happy woman with a spouse and her two kids. She was well-known for her poetry. Love was one of the things that was a part of her so much because as you read some of her poetry it stood in them. Sylvia seen love as unreal. With all her writings she inspire many people. Cherie Chetyrbok a fan of Sylvia once said “I have been Sylvia Plath fan since i was teen. I still love her‚ and amazed with her talent. Some say she did not get treatment because it might have diluted her talent

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