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Chapter 10: Sylvia Plath (1932-1963)
Page Links: |Primary Works | Selected Bibliography 1980-Present | MLA Style Citation of this Web Page |
Site Links: | Chap. 10: Index | Alphabetical List | Table Of Contents | Home Page | February 3, 2008 |

Source: Modern
American Poetry
The Colossus,1960; The Bell Jar, 1963; Ariel, 1965; Crossing the Water; transitional poems, 1971; Winter Trees, 1971; Letters Home: correspondence, 1950-1963, 1975; The Bed Book,1976; Johnny Panic and the Bible of dreams: short stories, prose, and diary excerpts,1979; The Collected Poems, 1981; The Journals, 1982.The Poetry of Sylvia Plath. Brennan, Claire (ed.). NY: Columbia UP, 1999.
Ariel: The Restored Edition. Hughes, Frieda (foreword). NY: HarperCollins, 2004.
List of Awards, etc.
First place in the Boston Globe contest for a news story, top prize in Atlantic Monthly Scholastic contest for fiction. Sylvia was offered a full scholarship to Wellesley College, which was close to her home. She accepted instead partial scholarships to Smith College where she would live on campus.First prize in Mademoiselle Fiction Contest for "Sunday at the Mintons" ($500).
A Fulbright Scholarship was awarded to Sylvia Plath to attend Cambridge University in England. Concurrently she had been selected for a Woodrow Wilson Scholarship for study in the United States but elected to study in England. The Dylan Thomas honorable mention was awarded for "Parallax," Mademoiselle. The Academy of American Poets Prize awarded her $100.00. The Ethel Olin Corbin Prize for a sonnet earned her $40.00. Marjorie Hope Nicholson Prize (tied for first place) for her honors thesis; was awarded $50.00. Vogue Prix de Paris. Sylvia was one of 12 winners to receive $25.00. Atlantic Monthly prize for "Circus in Three Rings" $25.00. Mademoiselle contest published "Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by Real Sea."
Collected Poems was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
Selected Bibliography 1980-Present
Alexander, Paul. Ariel ascending: writings about Sylvia Plath. NY: Harper & Row, 1985. PS3566 .L27 Z57
Axelrod, Steven G. Sylvia Plath: The Wound and the Cure of Words. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1992.
Basnett, Susan. Sylvia Plath. Towata, NJ: Barnes & Noble, 1987.
Bundtzen, Lynda K. Plath's incarnations: woman and the creative process. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 1983. PS3566 .L27 Z588
Christodoulides, Nephie. Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking: Motherhood in Sylvia Plath's Work. NY: Rodopi, 2005.
Hall, Caroline. Sylvia Plath, Revised. NY: Twayne, 1998.
Kirk, Connie A. Sylvia Plath: A Biography. Westport: Greenwood, 2004.
Meyering, Sheryl L. Sylvia Plath: a reference guide. Boston: G.K. Hall, 1990. PS 3566 .L27 Z784
Middlebrook, Diane. Her Husband: Hughes and Plath-A Marriage. NY: Viking, 2003.
Stevenson, Anne. Bitter fame: a life of Sylvia Plath. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1989. PS3566 .L27 Z9134
Van Dyne, Susan R. Revising life: Sylvia Plath's Ariel poems. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1993. PS3566 .L27 Z947
Wagner-Martin, Linda. Sylvia Plath: a biography. NY: Simon and Schuster, 1987. PS3566 .L27 Z96
---. ed. Critical essays on Sylvia Plath. Boston: G.K. Hall, 1984. PS3566 .L27 Z63
- - -. Sylvia Plath: A Literary Life. NY: St. Martin's, 1999.
Wood, David J. A Critical Study of the Birth Imagery of Sylvia Plath, American Poet 1932-1963. NY: Mellen, 1992.
| Top |Sylvia Plath (1932-1963): A Brief Biography
Sylvia Plath was born October 27, 1932, in Boston
Massachusetts and according to Linda Wagner-Martin, author of
Sylvia Plath A Biography,
she was born to highly educated parents, Otto Plath and Aurelia
Schober Plath. Otto was a Polish immigrant
who spoke three languages, German, Polish, and French, before
learning English. After he had received his Doctorate of Science in
entomology, he was entrusted with a permanent position at Boston
University. This
academic success on his part; however, did not earn him a higher
status in his family. Otto’s
parents expected him to become a Lutheran minister and after studying
the works of Charles Darwin, he became more convinced that the life
of a minister was not for him. His
grandparents took this as a sign of rejection and struck his name
from the family bible. (Wagner-Martin, 18)
Aurelia Schober worked as a librarian and typist at Boston
University where she met Otto Plath. Along with being Salutatorian of her high school class, she was Valedictorian of
her college class and taught English and German at Brookline High
School as she studied for her M.A. degree(19).
Like Otto she broke from her religion of Catholicism, finding in it a “controlling and repressive ideology”(19).
Otto Plath, a protestant and married, began to see Aurelia
socially in 1930. They shared their interest of languages, science and made
plans to work on academic projects together.
In the winter of 1931, Aurelia’s mother drove Otto and
Aurelia to Reno, Nevada so that Otto could divorce his wife and then
they traveled on to Carson City to be married. (19)
Sylvia Plath was born with in the year and two years later her
brother Warren was born. Warren
was a sickly child, and being
that Otto’s life revolved around his scholarship, Aurelia had a
difficult time giving “Sivvy” the attention she needed. Sylvia, being a lively child, spent much of her
young years with her maternal grandparents
who lived on Point Shirley in Winthrop, Massachusetts(21). Sylvia’s second family
was as gifted as Aurelia. Grammy
(who has the same name as her daughter Aurelia) graduated from the
Vienna Schools, and was selected to present a bouquet of flowers to
Emperor Franz Josef on a parade holiday (21) and she
was also a talented musician. Sylvia’s grandfather,
Frank Schober, Sr. spoke and read Italian, French, German, and
English ranking highest in his class in Austria (21).
As if Warren’s poor health was not a large enough burden
on the family, Sylvia’s father Otto started to experience a
degeneration of his health. Not believing he needed a doctor he went
unchecked for the next few years. Aurelia’s attentions
were clearly focused towards Warren and Otto and Sylvia received the
attention she needed through long stays with her grandparents. Sylvia
did not know her father like she did her grandparents (26).
Sylvia soon found that to receive attention from her father
that she must be a high achiever at school.
From her young years, the situation to achieve was fostered by
her father. Linda Wagner-Martin, author
of Sylvia Plath : A Biography writes,
Perhaps for twenty minutes in the evening he would be strong
enough to see the children. Then
Sylvia and Warren would show off.
They discussed what they had learned that day, recited poems,
made up stories, performed. Hardly a normal interchange,
this kind of session created the image of father as critic, judge,
someone to be pleased. It
robbed the children of the chance to know their father in the way
they knew Grampy Schober or to see him as a
loving and supportive parent. ( 26)
Otto’s illness got progressively worse.
By the time Aurelia sent for the Doctor his condition had
progressed to diabetes mellitus.
An infection in his toe had progressed to gain green and as a
result of this condition the doctors were forced to amputate his leg.
Otto never returned from the hospital. According to Wagner-Martin, he died of poor hospital care; however, Aurelia
Plath in the introduction of Letters Home by Sylvia Plath,
states that she was informed that Otto died in his sleep when an “embolus
had struck his lung” (24).
After Sylvia heard the news of her father’s death, she
proclaimed, “I will never speak to God again!” (Plath,
25)
After Sylvia’s father died, she worked tirelessly in
school, excelling at everything. She was editor of The Bradford,
her school newspaper, and along with
keeping up her studies she would write short stories and poetry and
send them out to the popular women’s and teen magazines. At one time, Sylvia counted 60 to 70 rejection
slips. However discouraging this may have been, her perseverance paid
off and in her Senior year of high school Sylvia had been published
by Seventeen, The Christian Science
Monitor, and The Boston Globe. She had a total of nine acceptances earning money
totaling $63.70 (Wagner-Martin, 47).
After high school Sylvia went on to Smith College where she
had an English Teacher who consistently gave her work “B’s.” Receiving an “A”
on two papers raised her average to a “B+ ” (63). Among all of Sylvia’s
accomplishments, she felt inadequate and questioned whether she would
ever be able to reach her goals.
Sylvia wrote in her diary, “ Never never never will I
reach the perfection I long for with all my soul----my paintings, my
poems, my stories.” (47) According to Wagner, “Whatever
Sylvia tried, it had to be done perfectly. Sylvia’s idealization of herself, or talents
and capabilities, pushed her to try to excel at everything.”
(47) Sylvia looked to the writers
Willa Cather, Virginia Wolf, and Lillian Hellman for inspiration and
wondered what they were like (65).
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These women and their works were not the only questions she
had. She also wondered and worried
about whether she should pursue an education and career or a man. She wanted a man, but she did
not want to be the submissive Christian wife.
She did however realize that “Immortality exists through
writing.” (65).
Sylvia experienced much success her sophomore year of college. Not only was every professor
who knew her impressed by her but the work she was submitting to
national magazines was once again being published.
Seventeen, Annual Anthology of College Poetry, and The Christian Science Monitor were all paying Sylvia for her
stories. It was also that year in 1952 that she took first prize in
the Mademoiselle Fiction
Contest (Wagner, 78). Even though Sylvia never felt her successes
were good enough, she did come to recognize the value of the
intuition in her poetry versus the male logic of her father (83).
The next year was not so good for Sylvia.
Even though she had sold some articles, she could not afford
the high tuition of Smith College.
A depressed Sylvia had toe attend Lawrence from 1952-1953. During this period she
experienced writers block, disappointment, and fear which all stemmed
from her “insatiable demands for perfection”(109). She experienced a mental breakdown which led to a
suicide attempt and a year in a mental hospital where she endured electroshock and insulin
shock therapy. She later
recounted her experience in her only novel, The Bell Jar. Unlike Sylvia’s life; however, the
protagonist, Esther Greenwood seems to suffer more of a psychosis. This fits with the fact that Plath used Shirley
Jackson’s The Bird’s Nest as an opportunity to
explore this area of the mind(164).
When this is coupled with the fact that Sylvia’s mother
later learned of depression in Otto’s (Sylvia’s father’s)
family (110), it can be inferred that Sylvia Plath suffered from
depression at a time in history when the drugs were
not available and the treatment was crude.
The next year, February 1953, Sylvia was able to return to
Smith, fully recovered. She
graduated summa cum laude and
won the Fullbright Fellowship to Cambridge in England (119).
During these next years after her breakdown, Sylvia
experienced more and more with developing her own sexuality.
She had numerous sexual partners both at Smith and while in
Cambridge (123) and according to Wagner-Martin, “Lovemaking
blotted out her anxieties about going to Cambridge”(123).
While in England, Sylvia met and married Ted Hughes a young
Faber & Faber poet. Being
that Sylvia thought of herself as a clairvoyant, she was comfortable
with Ted’s mystical family and mythical beliefs(138). If Sylvia
was conflicted before, now she knew what she wanted.
Even though she wanted to write, she put Ted’s writing
career first often working to support them both
so that Ted could write (140).
She also taught one year at Smith College during this time;
however, she was
not up for the work involved in the reading and grading all of
the student’s papers (142).
Sylvia worked, taught, and did the housework, and meanwhile
her resentment for Ted grew(152).
Ted and Sylvia had a stormy relationship which ended after the
birth of their second child Nicholas when Sylvia learned that Ted had
taken a lover. Overcome with poor health, exhaustion from raising her
two children alone and some unfavorable reviews of her novel,
The Bell Jar , Sylvia Plath took a hand full of
sleeping pills and turned on the gas to her oven and stuck her head
inside. She died on February 11, 1963 (244).
Plath’s achievements and awards include: Mademoiselle
College Board Contest in 1953; Irene Glascock Poetry Prize, 1955;
Fullbright fellowship, 1955-1957; Bess Hokin Award (Poetry magazine),
1957; first prize in Cheltenham Festival, 1961; Eugene Saxon
fellowship, 1961.
Works Cited
Concise
Dictionary of American Literary Biography: The New Consciousness,
1941-1968. Gale Research, 1987. Reproduced in Biography Resource
Center. Farmington Hills Mich.: The Gale Group. 2001.
(http://www.galenet.com/servletl/BioRC)
Plath,
Sylvia. Letters Home by Sylvia Plath. Ed. Aurelia Plath. New
York: 1975
Wagner-Martin,
Linda. Sylvia Plath a Biography. New York: Simon and Schuster,
1987.
MLA Style Citation of this Web Page
Reuben, Paul P. "Chapter 10: Sylvia Plath." PAL: Perspectives in American Literature- A Research and Reference Guide. URL:http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap10/plath.html (provide page date or date of your login).| Top |