preview

A Summary Of The Bell Jar

Better Essays

1. List the major topics/issues Sylvia Plath explores in The Bell Jar (at least four). To what extent are the issues still relevant today? The major topics explored in The Bell Jar include the inferiority of women, the wrongful treatment of the mentally ill, sexuality and the double standard for men and women on sex, and conformity to society’s expectations. The inferiority of women refers to society’s view that women are subordinate to men, and are supposed to serve men after marriage, become housewives, and bear babies. This perception of women in today’s society has largely declined, due to the constant call for gender equality. While there still exist the suppression and discrimination of women, the proponents of which are heavily condemned. The wrongful treatment of the mentally ill at the time includes the overall perception that mentally ill is a choice not a serious disease, the condemnation and alienation resulting from that perception, and the doctors’ indifferent, sometimes inhumane attitude toward the mentally ill, which includes electro-shock and solitary confinement. With great advancements in the medical field on mental conditions and an increase in people with mental disease, today people are generally sympathetic toward the mentally ill, who are treated appropriately by the doctors. Plath also highlights the issue of the double standards for men and women on sex, where men can pursue sexual intercourses freely, but women are supposed to keep chastity until marriage. Esther is troubled by this double standard throughout the novel, regarding sex as how a man controls a woman, and that she would only become free and own her body after she does a fitting for birth-control, and loses virginity to Irwin, whom she will never see again. This issue has become relatively irrelevant today, as premarital sex is not considered a moral issue anymore. In the novel, Esther constantly struggles between being herself and conforming to society’s expectations. In Esther’s case, the society expects her to become a housewife and stop pursuing her passion once she is married. Confronting against society’s expectations, Esther feels at times hopeless and disillusioned. This issue is still relevant today,

Get Access