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Term Papers on Sylvia Plath

Term Paper TitleSylvia Plath
# of Words1000
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)4

Sylvia Plath


The Life of Sylvia Plath


     Sylvia Plathıs life,  like her manic depression,  constantly jumped between Heaven and Hell.  Her seemingly perfect exterior hid a turbulent and deeply troubled spirit.  A closer look at  her childhood and personal experiences removes some element of mystery from her writings.
     One central character to Sylvia Plathıs poems is her father, Professor Otto Emile Plath.   Otto Plath was diabetic and  refused to stay away from foods restricted by his doctor.  As a result ,  he developed a sore on his left foot.  Professor Plath ignored the sore,  and eventually the foot was overcome with gangrene.  The foot and then the entire left leg were amputated in an effort to save his life,  but he died in November of 1940, when Sylvia was just eight years old.
     The fact that her father could have prevented his death left Sylvia Plath with a feeling of deliberate betrayal.  Instead of reaching out to other people for comfort, she isolated herself with writing as her only expressive outlet, and remarkably had a poem published when she was only eight.
     Plath continued prolific writing through high school and won a scholarship to Smith College in 1950 where she met her friend Anne Sexton.  Sexton often joined Plath for martinis at the Ritz where they shared poetry and intellectualized discussions about death.  Although they were friends, there was also an element of competition between Sexton and Plath.  Sylvia Plathıs poem ³Daddy² was possibly a response to Anne Sextonıs ³My Friend, My Friend.²  It was as if Plath was commenting that her writing skills were just a bit better than Sextonıs.  Sexton frequently would express to Robert Lowell in his poetry class her dissatisfaction with Plathıs writing.  She said that Plath ³dodges the point in her poetry and hadnıt yet found the form that belonged to her.²  The competitive nature of their relationship continued to the very end.
       To all appearences, Plath appeared normal, her social life similar to other middle class coeds.Many were attracted to Plathıs brilliant mind, but few  were aware of the inner torment that drove her to write,  alienating her  from the rest of society.
     Madamoiselle magazine awarded Plath a  position as guest editor the summer following her junior year at Smith.  Friends and family were stunned at her suicide attempt when she returned to college, most believing she had suffered a nervous breakdown due to the stress at the magazine.  Her treatment was considered the best the medical world could offer and included electro-shock and psychotherapies.  Plath tells her side of the story in  the  poem Lady Lazarus  where she likens her experience to a victim of the Holocaust.  But her  apparent recovery enabled her to return to graduate summa cum laude  the following year.
     Ted Hughes met and fell in love with the writer while she continued her studies at Cambridge on a Fulbright grant.  Hughes was also a student at Cambridge, and a fellow poet.  The couple married four years later, and after a short stay in...

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