Commentary Essay for Sylvia Plath’s Bell Jar. Sylvia Plath? Have you heard of her? Well‚ Sylvia Plath is a well-known poet‚ novelist and author. Plath was born during the great depression influencing her writing style. At a very young age she lost her father and since then she began lose faith. She also became ambivalent about religion all throughout her life. Plath was a very smart student and was accepted into Smith College in America. During her stay in college she was accepted as an editor
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This book was not published in the United States until 1971. The Bell Jar novel has become a classic of American literature. Only did you know this novel has been translated into twelve other different languages. The Bell Jar was written while she was struggling with her mental illness. This novel was based on her life and her own experiences and for young women’s mental breakdowns. In the book
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Isolation and Alienation in Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar Kate Finnegan In Sylvia Plath’s modern novel‚ The Bell Jar‚ the main character Esther isolates and alienates herself throughout the book because she mentally ill. Because her descent into a deep depression is slow and she leads a productive life when the reader first meets her‚ this descent seems rational to the reader in the beginning. Esther has an artsy soul. She is a writer and dreamer. When she does not make it into the writing program
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together by wires. I counted one‚ two‚ three ... nineteen poles‚ and then the wires dangled into space‚ and try as I would‚ I couldn’t see a single pole beyond the nineteenth."(Plath 123) This quote fully embodies the whole mood of the book‚ The Bell Jar by Silvia Plath. The main character Esther is constantly at war with herself‚ she can’t figure out what to work towards or where her life is going. She is unable to see past the nineteenth post in her life‚ it’s as if her life was never supposed
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to enlightenment. Both the memoire Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl and the novel The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath illustrate the mind’s ability to shine light through the darkest of times. Man’s Search for Meaning shares an experience through a concentration camp from Frankl’s own eyes. In his account of the camps‚ Frankl describes the nature of man when subjected to immense suffering. The Bell Jar follows the plight of a young woman‚ Esther Greenwood‚ as she begins a downward spiral in her
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Disappointment and Identity Crisis ——the reasons of Esther’s insanity in The Bell Jar The Bell Jar is the autobiographical book of Sylvia Plath and it follows the real story of the author’s experience of adolescent depression and suicide attempts (Wang‚ 2006). Esther Greenwood is the protagonist and narrator of The Bell Jar. She is a girl from Boston who is swept up into a fast-paced New York City life and cannot take it. The novel follows her descent into madness and her struggle to escape from
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contrast the presentation of Doctor Gordon from Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar‚ and the Big Nurse from Ken Kesey’s One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest in regard to the extracts. The two extracts from One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey‚ and The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath are both first person narratives depicting the rebellion towards the patriarchal society after the war in the 1950s and the 1960s. The first one‚ the extract from The Bell Jar shows Esther visiting Doctor Gordon‚ and the descriptions surrounding
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Sylvia Plath‚ a phenomenal author whose book The Bell Jar informed the world about her life as a woman in a man’s world while suffering from depression which took her life in the end. Writing a book in such an era‚ during the twentieth century when it was more common for a woman to stay home instead of going to work or having her own identity. Sylvia Plath managed to publish a book as such however after her death. This paper revolves around the ideas and mentality of the late twentieth century regarding
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The Bell Jar was the single novel Sylvia Plath ever wrote. The writer used the name of Victoria Lucas to publish it. This novel written in 1963 is closely connected with the real events from the Plath’s life. The Bell Jar fundamentally tells the story of a young and talented woman in the 1950-s suddenly getting into a culminating isolating process according to a psychic inability to cope with her seemingly established in advance social life. Her work had always been critically discussed‚ because
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‘The Medical Profession In The Bell Jar Is Presented As A Symbol Of Male Brutality.’ To What Extent Do You Agree With This Statement? The Bell Jar was written in the 1950s‚ a time when lobotomy was frequently used‚ electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) could be given without consent and a female doctor was a rare sight. The motif of male‚ medical brutality is a constant throughout the second half of the book. Plath critiques this point in many different ways for instance Esther’s treatment with Dr Gordon
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