Plath, Sylvia

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{{epname|Plath, Sylvia}}
| subject_name  = Sylvia Plath
 
| image_name    = Sylvia Plath A Literary Life.jpg
 
| image_size    = 180px
 
| image_caption  = Cover of Sylvia Plath: A Literary Life by Linda Wagner-Martin
 
| date_of_birth  = [[October 27]], [[1932]]
 
| place_of_birth = [[Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts]]
 
| date_of_death  = [[February 11]], [[1963]]
 
| place_of_death = [[London]]
 
}}
 
'''Sylvia Plath'''  ([[October 27]], [[1932]] – [[February 11]], [[1963]]) was an [[United States|American]] [[poet]], [[novelist]], [[short story]] writer, and [[essay]]ist. Most famous as a poet, Plath is also known for ''[[The Bell Jar]],'' her [[semi-autobiographical novel]] detailing her struggle with [[clinical depression]]. Plath and [[Anne Sexton]] are credited with advancing the genre of [[confessional poetry]] that [[Robert Lowell]] and [[W.D. Snodgrass]] initiated. Since her [[suicide]], Sylvia Plath has risen to [[icon|iconic]] status and is considered to be one of the best poets of her generation.
 
  
==Life==
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'''Sylvia Plath''' (October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) was an [[United States|American]] [[Poetry|poet]], [[novel]]ist, [[short story]] writer, and essayist. She is most famous for her semi-autobiographical novel, ''The Bell Jar'' and her advancements in '''confessional poetry''' building on the work of [[Robert Lowell]] and [[W.D. Snodgrass]]. Plath has been widely researched and followed since her controversial [[suicide]]. She has gained fame as one of the greatest poets of her generation. Widely read throughout the world, Sylvia Plath has risen to [[icon]]ic status because of her emotional poetry dealing with loss and depression, and has thus touched many people struggling with the same feelings.
[[Image:Plath Self-portrait.jpg|thumb|A self-portrait ''circa'' 1951.]]
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{{toc}}
Plath was born in [[Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts|Jamaica Plain]], a section of [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], [[Massachusetts]]. Born to a [[Germany|German]] father and an ethnic German [[Austria|Austrian-American]] mother, Plath showed early promise, publishing her first poem at the age of 8. She attended [[Wellesley High School]]. Her father, Otto, a college professor and noted authority on the subject of [[bees]], died of an [[embolism]] following surgery (complications from undiagnosed diabetes) on [[November 5]], [[1940]]. It is thought that Plath never fully recovered from the loss of her father. She continued to try to publish poems, and in August of 1950, her first short story, "And Summer Will Not Come Again" appeared in ''[[Seventeen (magazine)|Seventeen]]'' magazine.
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In 1982, Plath became the first poet to win a [[Pulitzer Prize]] posthumously for ''The Collected Poems''.  
  
Sylvia suffered from bouts of severe [[clinical depression|depression]] throughout her life. She had entered [[Smith College]] on a scholarship in 1950, but in the summer of 1953, after her return from a guest editorship at [[Madamoiselle]] magazine in New York, she experienced a severe episode of depression and was treated with a regimen of electro-convulsive shock therapy (ECT) and, subsequently, at the beginning of her junior year, on [[August 24]], [[1953]], she made the first of her [[suicide]] attempts.   She was committed to a mental institution ([[McLean Hospital]]), and seemed to make an acceptable recovery, graduating from Smith [[summa cum laude]] in [[1955]], the same year she won the prestigious [[Glascock Prize]] competition for her poem "[[Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea]]."  She later depicted her breakdown in her semi-autobiographical novel ''[[The Bell Jar]]''.
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==Early Life==
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'''Sylvia Plath''' was born in 1932 to Otto Plath and Aurelia Schober. Her mother had graduated second in her class from high school and served as [[valedictorian]] for her undergraduate studies at [[Boston University]]. She remained at Boston University to pursue her graduate studies in English and German. It was there that she met Otto Plath, a professor of German and Biology. Otto Plath served as one of Aurelia's teachers, and though he was married at the time (having been separated for thirteen years), the two fell in love. Otto received a divorce, and the two were married on January 4, 1932. Their first child, Sylvia, was born in Jamaica Plain, [[Massachusetts]], a section of Boston, on October 27, of that year. She was a gifted and talented child, who learned to speak and write before most children her age. By the age of five she was already composing full poems. Her brother, Warren, was born in 1935.  
  
Plath earned a [[Fulbright scholarship]] to the [[University of Cambridge]], where she continued writing poetry, occasionally publishing her work in the student newspaper ''[[Varsity (Cambridge)|Varsity]]''. At Cambridge she met [[England|English]] poet [[Ted Hughes]]. They were married on [[June 16]], [[1956]] (Bloomsday) with Plath's mother in attendance. Plath and Hughes spent from July 1957 to October [[1959]] living and working in the United States. Plath taught at Smith.  They then moved to Boston where Plath sat in on seminars with [[Robert Lowell]].  This course was to have a profound influence on her work.  Plath also met poet [[Anne Sexton]] during these seminars and became friends with her.  At this time Plath and Hughes also met, for the first time, [[William Merwin|W. S. Merwin]], who admired their work and remained a lifelong friend. On discovering that Plath was pregnant, they moved back to the United Kingdom. [[Frieda Hughes]] was born on [[April 1]], [[1960]].  
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The end of the 1930s saw the downfall of Otto Plath. He suffered from illnesses and complications for several years. He believed that he was suffering from [[lung cancer]], and because there was no effective treatment for [[cancer]] at the time, he decided not to see a doctor. However, in 1940, Otto developed a severe infection in his foot, for which he had to see the doctor. The doctor told him that his leg would have to be amputated, and that Otto suffered from [[diabetes]] and it was now quite advanced because of years without treatment. Shortly after the surgery, Otto Plath developed [[gangrene]] and died on November 5, 1940.  
  
She and Hughes lived in London for a while before settling in [[Court Green]], North Tawton, a small market town in Mid [[Devon|Devonshire]]. She published her first collection of poetry, ''[[The Colossus]]'', in the United Kingdom in 1960. In February 1961, she suffered a miscarriage. A number of poems refer to this event. The marriage met with difficulties and they were separated less than two years after the birth of their first child, Frieda. Their separation was partly due to her mental illness, which was exacerbated by the affair that Hughes had with a fellow poet's wife, [[Assia Wevill]]. The nature of her illness remains the subject of much speculation. Theories range from bipolar disorder (manic-depressive syndrome) to schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
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Sylvia, then only eight years old, proclaimed, "I'll never speak to God again," when she was informed that her father had died. Her father's death was the catalyst to many poems that Plath composed both during her childhood and as an adult. She often believed that her father had committed [[suicide]] in a sense, because he could have prevented his long illness and death if he had only been treated. In 1941, Sylvia Plath had her first poem published at the age of eight. The poem, given the simple title of "Poem," was about "what I see and hear on hot summer nights."
  
Plath returned to London with their children, [[Frieda Hughes|Frieda]] and Nicholas. She rented a flat in Fitzroy Road, Primrose Hill (near Regent's Park), in a house where [[W. B. Yeats]] once lived; Plath was extremely pleased with this and considered it a good omen. However, the winter of 1962/1963 was very harsh. Finding herself unable to cope, she rang her friend Jillian Becker and spent the last weekend of her life at the Becker household. The Becker home was warm and comfortable and equipped for children, the Beckers having three girls, the youngest a baby of about Nick's age. She appears to have been happy that weekend, and resolved to return home on the Sunday. On [[February 11]], [[1963]], Plath gassed herself in her kitchen, ending her life at the age of thirty. The new nanny arrived but couldn't rouse Plath's neighbor in the flat below, as he was under the effect of the gas. Plath's children were found in good health, if a bit chilled—she had taken the precautions of opening the windows in the other rooms and sealing the kitchen door crack with dish towels.
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With her father's death, and America's entrance into [[World War II]], Aurelia Plath decided to take a position at [[Boston University]]. Aurelia moved Sylvia, Warren, and her own parents, now living with them, to the town of Wellesley, Massachusetts. Aurelia was deeply troubled about how to handle Sylvia's withdrawn and angry behavior. She decided to enroll Sylvia in the fifth grade again. She thought that it would lessen the stress in Sylvia's life if she reviewed material that was already familiar to her, and if she were near students her own age. Sylvia had started school two years early, and was thus, the youngest person in her classes.  
  
Plath is buried in the churchyard at [[Heptonstall]], [[West Yorkshire]]. Rumours of her poverty in the last year of her life have been disputed by later books, particularly Anne Stevenson's ''Bitter Fame''. The neutrality of this biography is disputed, and it remains difficult to obtain an objective account of the relationship between Plath and [[Ted Hughes|Hughes]].
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In junior high, Sylvia submitted several poems for publication in the school newspaper and she even made drawings to accompany several of the poems. Her writing career continued to grow and find an audience as she attended Wellesley High School. She was vigilant in her efforts to publish her poems, as well as her short stories. In the August, 1950, edition of ''[[Seventeen (magazine)|Seventeen]],'' her story "And Summer Will Not Come Again" was published. Sylvia finished high school as the first in her class and finally saw one of her poems, "Bitter Strawberries," nationally published. The recognition she received for her writing was not easily gained. Sylvia sent out hundreds of submissions and met rejection letter after rejection letter. The stress she felt from these rejections often manifested itself as illness, most often as [[Clinical depression|depression]]. However, she was usually able to overcome these bouts when a favorable response was given to her work.
  
==Works==
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==Education==
[[Image:Sylvia Plath Letters Home.jpg|thumb|Letters Home (1975) by Sylvia Plath]]
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Upon graduation, Sylvia was given a scholarship to [[Smith College]] in Northampton, Massachusetts. Her writing resume continued to grow as Sylvia worked diligently to get stories and poems published in ''Seventeen,'' ''[[Harper's Magazine|Harper's]],'' and ''[[The Christian Science Monitor]].'' In 1953, Plath's ambitious efforts were rewarded when she was chosen as a guest editor at ''[[Mademoiselle (magazine)|Mademoiselle]]'' magazine in [[New York City]], which she won this with her submission, "Sunday at the Mintons."
Hughes became the executor of Plath’s personal and literary estates. This is controversial, as it is uncertain whether or not Plath had begun divorce proceedings before her death: if she had, Hughes' inheritance of the Plath estate would have been disputed. In letters to Aurelia Plath and Richard Murphy, Plath writes that she was applying for a divorce. However, Hughes has said in a letter to ''The Guardian'' that Plath did not seriously consider divorce, and claims they were talking about a future together right up until her death.
 
  
Sylvia Plath began keeping a diary at the age of 11 and kept journals until her suicide in February 1963.  Hughes faced criticism for his role in handling the journals: he destroyed Plath's last journal, which contains entries from the winter of 1962 up to her death.  Her adult diaries, starting from her freshmen year at Smith College in 1950, were first published in 1980 as ''The Journals of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Frances McCullough. In 1982, when Smith College acquired all of Plath's remaining journals, Hughes sealed two of them until [[February 11]], [[2013]] (50 years after Plath's death). During his last years of his life, Hughes began working on a fuller publication of Plath's journals.  In 1998, shortly before his death, he unsealed the two journals, and passed the project onto Freida and Nicholas, who passed it on to Karen V. Kukil.  Kukil finished her edits in December 1999 and in 2000 Anchor Books published ''The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath''.  According to the back cover, roughly two-thirds of the ''Unabridged Journals'' is newly unreleased material. The publication was hailed as a "genuine literary event" by [[Joyce Carol Oates]].
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The time in New York proved to be too much for Plath, and marked the beginning of her first breakdown. She once missed a lunch with one of the other editors, whose guest happened to be the poet [[Dylan Thomas]]. When Sylvia found out she had missed the chance to meet Thomas, she was frustrated and angry. She became obsessed with making up for this by meeting him. She began spending hours at his favorite taverns, she would wander the halls of his hotel building, and she began behaving very strangely. One of her co-editors recalls Sylvia's behavior, reporting that one night Sylvia came and asked to borrow a dress because she had tossed all of her own dresses off the roof of the hotel. It was during this time that Sylvia wrote her poem, "Mad Girl's Love Song."
  
In 1982, Plath became the first poet to win a [[Pulitzer Prize]] posthumously (for ''The Collected Poems'').
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Her return to Massachusetts and Smith College was marked by a very severe case of [[Clinical depression|depression]]. Her mother became concerned when she noticed cuts along Sylvia's legs. When she asked her daughter how she got them, Sylvia responded by saying that she wanted "to see if I had the guts." Sylvia admitted to her mother that she had thoughts of [[suicide]] and felt like she wanted to die.  
  
Many critics accused Hughes of attempting to control the publications for his own ends, although he denied this. Examples usually cited are his censoring of parts of her Journals, and his editing of Ariel. This editing involved removing several poems, and rearranging the order in which the works appeared. Some critics have argued this prevented what was intended to be a more uplifting beginning and ending of Ariel, and that the poems removed were the ones most readily identified as being about Hughes. He also cut a deal with Plath's mother Aurelia when she tried to block publication of her daughter's more controversial works in the United States. In his last collection, ''[[Birthday Letters]]'', Hughes broke his silence about Plath. The cover artwork was done by Frieda.  
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Sylvia's mother immediately sought help and Sylvia was taken to a clinic. She was treated with [[electro-convulsive shock therapy]] (ECT) along with [[counseling]]. Even though this helped for a period of months, on August 24, 1953, Sylvia attempted [[suicide]] by breaking into a locked box with medication inside. She wrote a note to her mother that she had gone on a walk and then she crawled under the front porch and into the cellar where she ingested 40 sleeping pills. For two days her family, friends and fellow townspeople searched for Sylvia, her disappearance making newspaper headlines. She was discovered August 26, when someone heard moaning coming from the cellar. She was barely alive and rushed to the hospital. She spent time in the psychiatric ward at Boston's McLean Hospital where she made a satisfactory recovery.  
  
While critics initially responded favorably to Plath's first book, ''The Colossus'', it has also been described as conventional and lacking the drama of her later works. The extent of Hughes' influence has been a topic of great debate. Plath's poems are in her own voice and the similarities between the two poets' works are slight.
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The time in New York, followed by her subsequent suicide attempt, is depicted in her most famous work, ''The Bell Jar.'' After her stay in the hospital, it took Sylvia several months before she started writing again. During this time, she started bleaching her hair platinum blond, creating a "new persona" for herself. Sylvia went on to graduate from Smith college ''summa cum laude'' in 1955. Sylvia applied to several universities, including [[University of Oxford]] and [[University of Cambridge]]. Prior to graduation, Sylvia was informed that she had won the very prestigious [[Fulbright scholarship]] to the University of Cambridge in England. Her joy was even more complete when she won the writing competition for the Glascock Prize with her poem, "Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea."
  
The poems in ''[[Ariel (Plath)|Ariel]]'' mark a departure from her earlier work into a more [[Confessionalism (poetry)|confessional]] area of poetry. It is possible Lowell's poetry—which was often labeled "confessional"—played a part in this shift. The impact of ''Ariel'' was dramatic, with its frank descriptions of mental illness in pseudo-autobiographical poems such as ''[[Daddy (poem)|Daddy]]''. Plath has also been heavily criticised for her controversial allusions to The Holocaust, and is known for her shocking use of metaphor. Plath's work has been associated with [[Anne Sexton]], [[W.D. Snodgrass]], and other [[confessional poetry|confessional]] poets. Despite criticism and biographies published after her death, the debate about Plath's work resembles a struggle between readers who side with her and readers who side with Hughes. An indication of the level of bitterness that some people have directed at Hughes can be seen in the history of people chiseling the word ''Hughes'' off her gravestone. Her headstone has subsequently been rendered more 'tamper proof.'
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==Marriage==
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When Sylvia Plath entered the University of Cambridge, she concentrated on two things, her writing, and her social life. She dated often, but was not interested in [[United Kingdom|English]] men. She went on a trip to [[France]] with an old friend with whom she wanted a serious relationship. When he informed her that he was dating someone else, she fell into depression again. While attending a launch party for the new Cambridge magazine, ''St. Boltophe's Review,'' she met English poet [[Ted Hughes]]. She was immediately attracted to him and asked to be introduced. When they met she quoted one of his poems to him and they began dating. Their relationship was a turbulent and passionate one. Ted Hughes was known as "the biggest seducer in Cambridge," but Sylvia ignored this fact.  
  
==Bibliography==
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The couple dated for only a few months before discussing [[marriage]]. Sylvia was worried that marriage would cause her to lose her scholarship so they were married in secret on June 16, 1956 (Bloomsday) with Plath's mother in attendance. Later, Sylvia learned that she would not lose her scholarship and the couple went public with their relationship.
  
===Poetry===
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Sylvia was offered a teaching position at Smith College in 1957, which she took. She and Hughes lived and worked in the United States from July 1957 to October 1959. Hughes received acclaim and celebration in America for his novel, ''The Hawk in the Rain,'' and for the first time, Sylvia felt very jealous of her husband. He was widely accepted and loved in a country that had rejected her again and again. During this time, Sylvia took seminars in Boston with [[Robert Lowell]] and there she also met poet [[Anne Sexton]].
*''[[The Colossus]]'' (1960)
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*''[[Ariel (Plath)|Ariel]]'' (1965)
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The couple returned to England when they found out that Sylvia was pregnant. Their daughter, [[Frieda Hughes]] was born on April 1, 1960. The child was named after a paternal aunt whom Sylvia admired.
*''[[Crossing the Water]]'' (1971)  
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*''[[Winter Trees]]'' (1972)
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==Motherhood==
*''[[The Collected Poems]]'' (1981)
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Sylvia and Hughes lived for a time in a small flat in London, but eventually settled in Court Green, North Tawton, a small market town in Mid Devonshire. They simultaneously worked on getting their poetry published. Her first collection of poetry, ''The Colossus and Other Poems,'' was published in the [[United Kingdom]] in 1960. Ted's second book of poems was published and received excellent reviews. In February 1961, Plath suffered a [[miscarriage]]. She was devastated by this event and wrote seven poems in February, the month she lost the baby. These poems are "Parliament Hill Fields," "Whitsun," "Zoo Keeper's Wife," "Face Lift," "Morning Song," "Heavy Women" and "Barren Woman," the majority dealing with the subject of loss.
*''[[Daddy (poem)|Daddy]]''
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Their marriage was not a happy one. The couple fought often; Ted hit Sylvia and she would hit him back. Sylvia's mother came to England to watch her granddaughter so that the couple could get away and spend some time together. They traveled to France, where Sylvia wrote many poems. A few months later she found out she was pregnant again. It was during this time that she submitted many poems to ''[[The New Yorker]]'' and also her manuscript, ''The Bell Jar.'' On January 21, 1962, Sylvia gave birth to a strong, healthy boy they named Nicholas. However, she became very distressed to see that Hughes was distant towards the child, and seemed disappointed that the baby was not another girl.
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Sylvia and Ted began associating with another literary couple, [[Assis Gutmann]] and [[David Wevill]]. Sylvia noticed immediately that flirtations were going on between her husband and Assis. Sylvia let her feelings be known through her poetry. The flirtations grew into a full affair and when Sylvia discovered it she became angry and bitter, resorting to violent behavior. The marriage fell apart with Hughes blaming it on her [[mental illness]] and Sylvia blaming it on his affair. Sylvia's exact illness was never diagnosed. Theories range from [[bipolar disorder]] (manic-depressive syndrome) to [[schizophrenia]] and [[obsessive-compulsive disorder]].
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Plath returned to London with their two children and rented a flat where [[William Butler Yeats]] once lived. She wanted to get back at Hughes for his treatment of her so she began another novel about an adulterous husband. Although Sylvia claimed that she was happier now that she was separated from Hughes, her outward behavior did not validate this claim. She had a very depressed winter in 1962, trying to deal with her first [[Christmas]] without Ted.
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==Death==
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After a harsh Christmas, Plath knew she was lonely and depressed. She called on her friend [[Jillian Becker]] and sought refuge at her house in the country. The Becker home was everything Sylvia longed for, a house full of children, love, and kindness. It offered her and her children warmth and comfort. The weekend was a happy one, full of laughter and fun for the children. She ventured back to London on a Sunday.
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On February 11, 1963, Plath made her children a snack of bread and butter. She opened their bedroom window, closed the door and put tape and towels under the doors to the kitchen and the children's bedroom. She then went into the kitchen and turned on the gas to the oven. She knelt in front of the oven and inhaled the gas until she died. A nurse arrived at the house, but was unable to enter. She tried at the neighbors, but they too did not answer as they were also suffering from the effects of the gas. Finally, she got in with the help of a construction worker and found Plath and the children. The children were fine because of the cold air coming in from the open window.
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Plath was buried in the churchyard at Heptonstall, West Yorkshire in the Hughes family cemetery. In March of 2009 her son's life took a similar tragic turn, 46 years after his mother gassed herself while he slept. Nicholas Hughes hanged himself at his home in [[Alaska]] after battling against depression for some time. He was unmarried with no children of his own and had been a professor of fisheries and ocean sciences at the [[University of Alaska]] Fairbanks.
  
===Prose===
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==Legacy==
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Sylvia Plath eventually gained all the recognition in death that she had sought in life.
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{{readout||right|250px|Sylvia Plath was the first [[poet]] to win a [[Pulitzer Prize]] posthumously, for ''The Collected Poems'' published almost twenty years after her death by [[suicide]]}}
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At Sylvia Plath's death, her husband Ted Hughes became the sole executor of Plath’s personal and literary estates. Many disagreed with this decision, claiming that Sylvia was in the process of obtaining a [[divorce]] from Ted Hughes, and thus, he should have no say in the distribution of her property. Her apparent desire for a divorce was never proven. It seems that she wrote letters to family and friends that stated she had begun filing for divorce, while at the same time telling other friends that she was hopeful for a reconciliation. If Sylvia had been in the process of divorcing Hughes, then his [[inheritance]] of her estate would have been disputed. Admirers of Plath were angered by this to the extent that the name "Hughes" was chiseled off of Plath's headstone. It has now been made tamper proof.
  
*''[[The Bell Jar]]'' (1963) under the pseudonym 'Victoria Lucas'
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A major factor in the angry reaction over Hughes handling of Plath's estate was his destruction of her very last journal. It covered the period from the winter of 1962 to her death. Sylvia Plath was an avid diary keeper. She started writing in her diary at the age of 11 and completed several volumes until her death. The diaries that chronicled her life in college and onward were finally published in 1980, titled, ''The Journals of Sylvia Plath,'' edited by Frances McCullough.  
*''Letters Home'' (1975) to and edited by her mother
 
*[[Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams]] (1977) (the UK edition contains two stories the US edition does not)
 
*''The Journals of Sylvia Plath'' (1982)
 
*''The Magic Mirror'' (1989), Plath's Smith College senior thesis
 
*''The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Karen V. Kukil (2000)
 
  
====Children's====
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In 1982, Hughes gave Sylvia's remaining journals to [[Smith College]], where he sealed two of them until February 11, 2013 (50 years after Plath's death). However, Hughes decided to unseal the journals in 1998 and turned them over to his children, Freida and Nicholas. The children decided to pass the project on to [[Karen V. Kukil]]. Kukil finished her edits in December 1999 and in 2000 Anchor Books published ''The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath.'' According to the back cover, roughly two-thirds of the ''Unabridged Journals'' is newly unreleased material. [[Joyce Carol Oates]] hailed the publication as a "genuine literary event."
  
*''The Bed Book'' (1976)
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In 1982, Plath became the first poet to win a [[Pulitzer Prize]] posthumously (for ''The Collected Poems''). Hughes did much of the work in getting the rest of Sylvia's writings published, including the book of poems, ''Ariel''. Many critics were angry with his apparent re-organization of the poems, claiming that he was changing the original intent of the book, and thus the feelings of Plath, herself. Hughes denied all these accusations, and truly tried to release as much of Plath's writing to the world as he could. He even persuaded Sylvia's mother, Aurelia, to agree to the publication of Sylvia's more controversial works. In Hughes's last collection, ''Birthday Letters,'' he finally speaks out about his lingering and intense feelings for Sylvia Plath. His daughter, Frieda, did the cover artwork.
*''The It-Doesn't-Matter-Suit'' (1996)
 
*''Collected Children's Stories'' (UK, 2001)
 
*''Mrs. Cherry's Kitchen'' (2001)
 
* A number of 'limited edition' works were published by specialist publishers, often with very small print runs.
 
  
===Biography===
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It is through the poems in ''Ariel'' that Plath departs from her earlier style and makes her way into the confessional area of poetry. It is often thought that [[Robert Lowell]]'s poetry—which was often labeled "confessional"—influenced Sylvia in her change of style. The impact of ''Ariel'' was dramatic. It was open and honest with its depiction of mental illness, loss, depression, anxiety, and loneliness. Many continue to see similarities in Plath's work and her fellow poets, such as [[Anne Sexton]], [[W.D. Snodgrass]], and other confessional poets.
  
*[http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0791078434/104-3106806-3363960 ''Sylvia Plath''] (2004, Chelsea House, Great Writers Series) by Peter K. Steinberg | ISBN 0791078434
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===Poetry===
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*''The Colossus'' (1960) ISBN 978-0375704468
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*''Ariel'' (1965) ISBN 0060908904
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*''Crossing the Water'' (1971) ISBN 0060907894
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*''Winter Trees'' (1972) ISBN 0571108628
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*''The Collected Poems'' (1981) ISBN 0060909005
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*''Daddy''
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===Prose===
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*''The Bell Jar'' (1963) ISBN 0060930187 under the pseudonym 'Victoria Lucas'
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*''Letters Home'' (1975) ISBN 0060974915 to and edited by her mother
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*''Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams'' ISBN 0060955295 (1977) (the UK edition contains two stories, the US edition does not)
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*''The Journals of Sylvia Plath'' (1982) ISBN 0345351681
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*''The Magic Mirror'' (1989), Plath's Smith College senior thesis
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*''The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Karen V. Kukil (2000) ISBN 0385720254
  
==Other references==
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===Children's===
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*''The Bed Book'' (1976) ISBN 0064431843
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*''The It-Doesn't-Matter-Suit'' (1996) ISBN 057119060X
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*''Collected Children's Stories'' (UK, 2001) ISBN 0571207561
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*''Mrs. Cherry's Kitchen'' (2001) ISBN 057119589X
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A number of 'limited edition' works were published by specialist publishers, often with very small print runs.
  
*The [[2003 in film|2003]] [[film]], ''[[Sylvia (2003 film)|Sylvia]]'', tells the story of the troubled relationship of the poet couple.
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==References==
*[[Ronald Hayman|Hayman, Ronald]] [[[1991]]] ''The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath'' London, Melbourne, Auckland  Heinemann
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*Becker, Jillian. 2002. ''Giving Up: The Last Days of Sylvia Plath.'' London: Ferrington. ISBN 0312315988
*''Ariel's Gift: Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and the Story of'' Birthday Letters, by [[Erica Wagner]].
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*Hayman, Ronald. 1991. ''The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath.'' London: Heinemann. ISBN 0750934220
*[[Linda Wagner-Martin]] "Sylvia Plath: A Literary Life". London: Palgrave Macmillan, 1999.
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*Steinberg, Peter K. 2004. ''Sylvia Plath,'' Chelsea House Great Writers Series. ISBN 0791078434
*[[Jillian Becker]]: ''Giving Up: The Last Days of Sylvia Plath''. The friend with whom Plath spent the last weekend of her life recalls their friendship. Ferrington, London 2002
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*Wagner, Erica. 2001. ''Ariel's Gift: Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and the Story of "Birthday Letters."'' Faber & Faber. ISBN 0571205267
*"Sylvia Plath" by Ryan Adams from the record "Gold" 2001
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*Wagner-Martin, Linda. 1999. ''Sylvia Plath: A Literary Life.'' London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0312223234
*"Crackle & Drag" by Paul Westerberg from the 2003 album "Come Feel Me Tremble"
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.sylviaplath.info/index2.html www.sylviaplath.info]
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All links retrieved February 26, 2023.
* [http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=3579 Literary Encyclopedia biography]
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*[http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=3579 Literary Encyclopedia biography].
* [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/splath.htm Biography]
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*[http://www.poets.org/splat Sylvia Plath on Poets.org] Biography, poems, related essays and links from the Academy of American Poets.
*[http://www.poets.org/splat Sylvia Plath on Poets.org] Biography, poems, related essays and links from the Academy of American Poets
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*[http://www.sylviaplathforum.com Sylvia Plath Forum].  
*[http://www.sylviaplathforum.com Sylvia Plath Forum]
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*[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1580 Sylvia Plath's Gravesite].
*[http://www.neuroticpoets.com/plath/ Sylvia Plath at Neurotic Poets]
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*[http://www.sylviaplath.de/ Sylvia Plath homepage] by Anja Beckmann.
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1580 Sylvia Plath's Gravesite]
 
  
  
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Latest revision as of 01:56, 27 February 2023

Sylvia Plath (October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) was an American poet, novelist, short story writer, and essayist. She is most famous for her semi-autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar and her advancements in confessional poetry building on the work of Robert Lowell and W.D. Snodgrass. Plath has been widely researched and followed since her controversial suicide. She has gained fame as one of the greatest poets of her generation. Widely read throughout the world, Sylvia Plath has risen to iconic status because of her emotional poetry dealing with loss and depression, and has thus touched many people struggling with the same feelings.

In 1982, Plath became the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize posthumously for The Collected Poems.

Early Life

Sylvia Plath was born in 1932 to Otto Plath and Aurelia Schober. Her mother had graduated second in her class from high school and served as valedictorian for her undergraduate studies at Boston University. She remained at Boston University to pursue her graduate studies in English and German. It was there that she met Otto Plath, a professor of German and Biology. Otto Plath served as one of Aurelia's teachers, and though he was married at the time (having been separated for thirteen years), the two fell in love. Otto received a divorce, and the two were married on January 4, 1932. Their first child, Sylvia, was born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, a section of Boston, on October 27, of that year. She was a gifted and talented child, who learned to speak and write before most children her age. By the age of five she was already composing full poems. Her brother, Warren, was born in 1935.

The end of the 1930s saw the downfall of Otto Plath. He suffered from illnesses and complications for several years. He believed that he was suffering from lung cancer, and because there was no effective treatment for cancer at the time, he decided not to see a doctor. However, in 1940, Otto developed a severe infection in his foot, for which he had to see the doctor. The doctor told him that his leg would have to be amputated, and that Otto suffered from diabetes and it was now quite advanced because of years without treatment. Shortly after the surgery, Otto Plath developed gangrene and died on November 5, 1940.

Sylvia, then only eight years old, proclaimed, "I'll never speak to God again," when she was informed that her father had died. Her father's death was the catalyst to many poems that Plath composed both during her childhood and as an adult. She often believed that her father had committed suicide in a sense, because he could have prevented his long illness and death if he had only been treated. In 1941, Sylvia Plath had her first poem published at the age of eight. The poem, given the simple title of "Poem," was about "what I see and hear on hot summer nights."

With her father's death, and America's entrance into World War II, Aurelia Plath decided to take a position at Boston University. Aurelia moved Sylvia, Warren, and her own parents, now living with them, to the town of Wellesley, Massachusetts. Aurelia was deeply troubled about how to handle Sylvia's withdrawn and angry behavior. She decided to enroll Sylvia in the fifth grade again. She thought that it would lessen the stress in Sylvia's life if she reviewed material that was already familiar to her, and if she were near students her own age. Sylvia had started school two years early, and was thus, the youngest person in her classes.

In junior high, Sylvia submitted several poems for publication in the school newspaper and she even made drawings to accompany several of the poems. Her writing career continued to grow and find an audience as she attended Wellesley High School. She was vigilant in her efforts to publish her poems, as well as her short stories. In the August, 1950, edition of Seventeen, her story "And Summer Will Not Come Again" was published. Sylvia finished high school as the first in her class and finally saw one of her poems, "Bitter Strawberries," nationally published. The recognition she received for her writing was not easily gained. Sylvia sent out hundreds of submissions and met rejection letter after rejection letter. The stress she felt from these rejections often manifested itself as illness, most often as depression. However, she was usually able to overcome these bouts when a favorable response was given to her work.

Education

Upon graduation, Sylvia was given a scholarship to Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. Her writing resume continued to grow as Sylvia worked diligently to get stories and poems published in Seventeen, Harper's, and The Christian Science Monitor. In 1953, Plath's ambitious efforts were rewarded when she was chosen as a guest editor at Mademoiselle magazine in New York City, which she won this with her submission, "Sunday at the Mintons."

The time in New York proved to be too much for Plath, and marked the beginning of her first breakdown. She once missed a lunch with one of the other editors, whose guest happened to be the poet Dylan Thomas. When Sylvia found out she had missed the chance to meet Thomas, she was frustrated and angry. She became obsessed with making up for this by meeting him. She began spending hours at his favorite taverns, she would wander the halls of his hotel building, and she began behaving very strangely. One of her co-editors recalls Sylvia's behavior, reporting that one night Sylvia came and asked to borrow a dress because she had tossed all of her own dresses off the roof of the hotel. It was during this time that Sylvia wrote her poem, "Mad Girl's Love Song."

Her return to Massachusetts and Smith College was marked by a very severe case of depression. Her mother became concerned when she noticed cuts along Sylvia's legs. When she asked her daughter how she got them, Sylvia responded by saying that she wanted "to see if I had the guts." Sylvia admitted to her mother that she had thoughts of suicide and felt like she wanted to die.

Sylvia's mother immediately sought help and Sylvia was taken to a clinic. She was treated with electro-convulsive shock therapy (ECT) along with counseling. Even though this helped for a period of months, on August 24, 1953, Sylvia attempted suicide by breaking into a locked box with medication inside. She wrote a note to her mother that she had gone on a walk and then she crawled under the front porch and into the cellar where she ingested 40 sleeping pills. For two days her family, friends and fellow townspeople searched for Sylvia, her disappearance making newspaper headlines. She was discovered August 26, when someone heard moaning coming from the cellar. She was barely alive and rushed to the hospital. She spent time in the psychiatric ward at Boston's McLean Hospital where she made a satisfactory recovery.

The time in New York, followed by her subsequent suicide attempt, is depicted in her most famous work, The Bell Jar. After her stay in the hospital, it took Sylvia several months before she started writing again. During this time, she started bleaching her hair platinum blond, creating a "new persona" for herself. Sylvia went on to graduate from Smith college summa cum laude in 1955. Sylvia applied to several universities, including University of Oxford and University of Cambridge. Prior to graduation, Sylvia was informed that she had won the very prestigious Fulbright scholarship to the University of Cambridge in England. Her joy was even more complete when she won the writing competition for the Glascock Prize with her poem, "Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea."

Marriage

When Sylvia Plath entered the University of Cambridge, she concentrated on two things, her writing, and her social life. She dated often, but was not interested in English men. She went on a trip to France with an old friend with whom she wanted a serious relationship. When he informed her that he was dating someone else, she fell into depression again. While attending a launch party for the new Cambridge magazine, St. Boltophe's Review, she met English poet Ted Hughes. She was immediately attracted to him and asked to be introduced. When they met she quoted one of his poems to him and they began dating. Their relationship was a turbulent and passionate one. Ted Hughes was known as "the biggest seducer in Cambridge," but Sylvia ignored this fact.

The couple dated for only a few months before discussing marriage. Sylvia was worried that marriage would cause her to lose her scholarship so they were married in secret on June 16, 1956 (Bloomsday) with Plath's mother in attendance. Later, Sylvia learned that she would not lose her scholarship and the couple went public with their relationship.

Sylvia was offered a teaching position at Smith College in 1957, which she took. She and Hughes lived and worked in the United States from July 1957 to October 1959. Hughes received acclaim and celebration in America for his novel, The Hawk in the Rain, and for the first time, Sylvia felt very jealous of her husband. He was widely accepted and loved in a country that had rejected her again and again. During this time, Sylvia took seminars in Boston with Robert Lowell and there she also met poet Anne Sexton.

The couple returned to England when they found out that Sylvia was pregnant. Their daughter, Frieda Hughes was born on April 1, 1960. The child was named after a paternal aunt whom Sylvia admired.

Motherhood

Sylvia and Hughes lived for a time in a small flat in London, but eventually settled in Court Green, North Tawton, a small market town in Mid Devonshire. They simultaneously worked on getting their poetry published. Her first collection of poetry, The Colossus and Other Poems, was published in the United Kingdom in 1960. Ted's second book of poems was published and received excellent reviews. In February 1961, Plath suffered a miscarriage. She was devastated by this event and wrote seven poems in February, the month she lost the baby. These poems are "Parliament Hill Fields," "Whitsun," "Zoo Keeper's Wife," "Face Lift," "Morning Song," "Heavy Women" and "Barren Woman," the majority dealing with the subject of loss.

Their marriage was not a happy one. The couple fought often; Ted hit Sylvia and she would hit him back. Sylvia's mother came to England to watch her granddaughter so that the couple could get away and spend some time together. They traveled to France, where Sylvia wrote many poems. A few months later she found out she was pregnant again. It was during this time that she submitted many poems to The New Yorker and also her manuscript, The Bell Jar. On January 21, 1962, Sylvia gave birth to a strong, healthy boy they named Nicholas. However, she became very distressed to see that Hughes was distant towards the child, and seemed disappointed that the baby was not another girl.

Sylvia and Ted began associating with another literary couple, Assis Gutmann and David Wevill. Sylvia noticed immediately that flirtations were going on between her husband and Assis. Sylvia let her feelings be known through her poetry. The flirtations grew into a full affair and when Sylvia discovered it she became angry and bitter, resorting to violent behavior. The marriage fell apart with Hughes blaming it on her mental illness and Sylvia blaming it on his affair. Sylvia's exact illness was never diagnosed. Theories range from bipolar disorder (manic-depressive syndrome) to schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Plath returned to London with their two children and rented a flat where William Butler Yeats once lived. She wanted to get back at Hughes for his treatment of her so she began another novel about an adulterous husband. Although Sylvia claimed that she was happier now that she was separated from Hughes, her outward behavior did not validate this claim. She had a very depressed winter in 1962, trying to deal with her first Christmas without Ted.

Death

After a harsh Christmas, Plath knew she was lonely and depressed. She called on her friend Jillian Becker and sought refuge at her house in the country. The Becker home was everything Sylvia longed for, a house full of children, love, and kindness. It offered her and her children warmth and comfort. The weekend was a happy one, full of laughter and fun for the children. She ventured back to London on a Sunday.

On February 11, 1963, Plath made her children a snack of bread and butter. She opened their bedroom window, closed the door and put tape and towels under the doors to the kitchen and the children's bedroom. She then went into the kitchen and turned on the gas to the oven. She knelt in front of the oven and inhaled the gas until she died. A nurse arrived at the house, but was unable to enter. She tried at the neighbors, but they too did not answer as they were also suffering from the effects of the gas. Finally, she got in with the help of a construction worker and found Plath and the children. The children were fine because of the cold air coming in from the open window.

Plath was buried in the churchyard at Heptonstall, West Yorkshire in the Hughes family cemetery. In March of 2009 her son's life took a similar tragic turn, 46 years after his mother gassed herself while he slept. Nicholas Hughes hanged himself at his home in Alaska after battling against depression for some time. He was unmarried with no children of his own and had been a professor of fisheries and ocean sciences at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Legacy

Sylvia Plath eventually gained all the recognition in death that she had sought in life.

Did you know?
Sylvia Plath was the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize posthumously, for The Collected Poems published almost twenty years after her death by suicide

At Sylvia Plath's death, her husband Ted Hughes became the sole executor of Plath’s personal and literary estates. Many disagreed with this decision, claiming that Sylvia was in the process of obtaining a divorce from Ted Hughes, and thus, he should have no say in the distribution of her property. Her apparent desire for a divorce was never proven. It seems that she wrote letters to family and friends that stated she had begun filing for divorce, while at the same time telling other friends that she was hopeful for a reconciliation. If Sylvia had been in the process of divorcing Hughes, then his inheritance of her estate would have been disputed. Admirers of Plath were angered by this to the extent that the name "Hughes" was chiseled off of Plath's headstone. It has now been made tamper proof.

A major factor in the angry reaction over Hughes handling of Plath's estate was his destruction of her very last journal. It covered the period from the winter of 1962 to her death. Sylvia Plath was an avid diary keeper. She started writing in her diary at the age of 11 and completed several volumes until her death. The diaries that chronicled her life in college and onward were finally published in 1980, titled, The Journals of Sylvia Plath, edited by Frances McCullough.

In 1982, Hughes gave Sylvia's remaining journals to Smith College, where he sealed two of them until February 11, 2013 (50 years after Plath's death). However, Hughes decided to unseal the journals in 1998 and turned them over to his children, Freida and Nicholas. The children decided to pass the project on to Karen V. Kukil. Kukil finished her edits in December 1999 and in 2000 Anchor Books published The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath. According to the back cover, roughly two-thirds of the Unabridged Journals is newly unreleased material. Joyce Carol Oates hailed the publication as a "genuine literary event."

In 1982, Plath became the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize posthumously (for The Collected Poems). Hughes did much of the work in getting the rest of Sylvia's writings published, including the book of poems, Ariel. Many critics were angry with his apparent re-organization of the poems, claiming that he was changing the original intent of the book, and thus the feelings of Plath, herself. Hughes denied all these accusations, and truly tried to release as much of Plath's writing to the world as he could. He even persuaded Sylvia's mother, Aurelia, to agree to the publication of Sylvia's more controversial works. In Hughes's last collection, Birthday Letters, he finally speaks out about his lingering and intense feelings for Sylvia Plath. His daughter, Frieda, did the cover artwork.

It is through the poems in Ariel that Plath departs from her earlier style and makes her way into the confessional area of poetry. It is often thought that Robert Lowell's poetry—which was often labeled "confessional"—influenced Sylvia in her change of style. The impact of Ariel was dramatic. It was open and honest with its depiction of mental illness, loss, depression, anxiety, and loneliness. Many continue to see similarities in Plath's work and her fellow poets, such as Anne Sexton, W.D. Snodgrass, and other confessional poets.

Poetry

Prose

  • The Bell Jar (1963) ISBN 0060930187 under the pseudonym 'Victoria Lucas'
  • Letters Home (1975) ISBN 0060974915 to and edited by her mother
  • Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams ISBN 0060955295 (1977) (the UK edition contains two stories, the US edition does not)
  • The Journals of Sylvia Plath (1982) ISBN 0345351681
  • The Magic Mirror (1989), Plath's Smith College senior thesis
  • The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath, edited by Karen V. Kukil (2000) ISBN 0385720254

Children's

A number of 'limited edition' works were published by specialist publishers, often with very small print runs.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Becker, Jillian. 2002. Giving Up: The Last Days of Sylvia Plath. London: Ferrington. ISBN 0312315988
  • Hayman, Ronald. 1991. The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath. London: Heinemann. ISBN 0750934220
  • Steinberg, Peter K. 2004. Sylvia Plath, Chelsea House Great Writers Series. ISBN 0791078434
  • Wagner, Erica. 2001. Ariel's Gift: Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and the Story of "Birthday Letters." Faber & Faber. ISBN 0571205267
  • Wagner-Martin, Linda. 1999. Sylvia Plath: A Literary Life. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0312223234

External links

All links retrieved February 26, 2023.


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