The Bell Jar is one of the most famous and acknowledged Coming - of - Age novels today written by Sylvia Plath.. Showing the change from adolescents to womanly adulthood. Esther notices differences between her and her friends, even trying quite a few attempts to commit suicide. The source of her obvious discomfort is never made clear throughout the book. ("The Bell Jar Thesis Statements and Important Quotes." PaperStartercom.) The Bell Jar was originally published on January 14, 1963. The setting of the novel is sometimes around January 1953 - January 1954 in New York City, the Boston Suburbs, and in a Mental facility, the tone detached and depressed. The story follows Esther Greenwood, foreshadowing her suicide in the many attempts she tried. …show more content…
She was a very bright girl who won prizes and scholarships throughout her early childhood. In 1950, she went to Smith College and became a class president who had stories and poems published. In 1952, she was the guest editor at the Mademoiselle. The Bell Jar follows through her life almost exactly. Her being in Boston, the boys, guest editor, hospitalization, treatments. She was depressed and suicidal trying several times before finally succeeding by placing her head in the oven. She was put through Electrical shock treatments on multiple occasions. In 1963, Sylvia Plath committed suicide. ("JiffyNotes: Bell Jar, The: Summary: Historical Context." JiffyNotes) Sylvia Plath’s writing style is very personal and disorienting. Her work shows a lot of raw emotions and intense detail. She often writes about depression and madness, putting in her own little comments …show more content…
"The Bell Jar Themes.") ("Notes on The Bell Jar Themes." BookRags.) In the Bell Jar, it’s okay for men to have sexual desires and to actively act upon them but for women, it’s way different. Women are suppose to view sex as something detached from love and passion or anything of the sort. They are suppose to remain innocent until they get married, then are expected to have sex for one purpose: Babies. Esther is fascinated by sexuality even though she is unimpressed with Buddy Willard’s naked body and his betrayal all of a sudden makes her become ready for it. She doesn’t actually buy into the whole importance of the chastity thing. She doesn’t feel like it is that important and she feels that way for the duration of the book.(Shmoop Editorial Team. "The Bell Jar Theme of Sex.") She doesn’t recognize herself in the mirror or in photographs that she’s in. It is mentioned several times during the book that she’ll stare continuously at herself and not even comprehend that the person staring back at her through the mirror is her. At one point, she’s looking at her reflection in the elevator door and she refuses to accept that the creature she was looking at was her or even after her suicide attempt and her face is all bruised up and swollen. She got to the point of not even being able to tell if she was a man or a woman.(SparkNotes. SparkNotes. Web. 06 Apr. 2016) She begins to make aliases for herself over a series of time. Her main alias, Elly
Sylvia Plath is the author of the Bell Jar and was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer (JRSM. June, 2003). The Bell Jar book was published in London a month before Plath’s death in January, 1963. The book was first published under the pseudonym Victoria Lucas, and then later published in Plath’s own name. Esther Greenwood is the main character in the Bell Jar. Esther suffered from mental illness and struggled against depressive environment and continuously aggravated madness that led to her suicide and death (JRSM. June, 2003). I ague that Esther’s mental illness was aggravated by her internal pressure and depressive environment in which she lived.
Sylvia Plath’s novel, “The Bell Jar”, tells a story of a young woman’s descent into mental illness. Esther Greenwood, a 19 year old girl, struggles to find meaning within her life as she sees a distorted version of the world. In Plath’s novel, different elements and themes of symbolism are used to explain the mental downfall of the book’s main character and narrator such as cutting her off from others, forcing her to delve further into her own mind, and casting an air of negativity around her. Plath uses images of rotting fig trees and veils of mist to convey the desperation she feels when confronted with issues of her future. Esther Greenwood feels that she is trapped under a bell jar, which distorts her view of the world around her.
Esther faces an increasing sense of anxiety concerning her future. She is constantly worries what about her future. Her anxiety leads to a severe depression and several suicide attempts from which Esther slowly recovers through asserting her independence and controlling her own destiny. Silence also leads to Esther’s depression, “The silence depressed me. It wasn 't the silence of silence. It was my own silence.” Esther felt as if she was an outsider to society due to her background as a small town girl. She clearly felt a distinction between her and the other girls like Lenny and Doreen, “I felt myself shrinking to a small black dot [...] I felt like a hole in the ground.” Furthermore, due to her different background, she became disappointed in herself for not meeting the expectations of what society had portrayed girls to be. “I started adding up all the things I couldn 't do [...] I felt dreadfully inadequate [...] The one thing I was good at was winning scholarships and prizes, and that era was coming to an end.”
The Bell Jar, a coming of age, semi-autobiographical novel, by Sylvia Plath follows the life of a troubled young girl named Esther Greenwood, her slow descent into mental illness and then her subsequent recovery. The second half of the book details Esther's mental breakdown, her incarceration and stumbling recovery whilst the first half uncovers the protagonists, narrators day to day struggles which go on to contribute to her eventual breakdown . Throughout the novel, the reader comes to understand that Esther feels there are few choices; in character a woman must be either the virgin or the whore, both of which are demonstrated by Esther's friends, Betsy and Doreen. This presents one of the key internal conflicts the protagonist, Esther battles.
Living without control of your life and being powerless is especially difficult for anyone to cope with. In the novel The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath, a unique individual is struggling to find her way in life as she is living as a powerless individual. The lack of control, guidance, and power, leads to her downfall battling with reality. Plath gives the perspective of a young woman’s madness as a reaction of the social pressure that the 1950’s attributed.
The themes in The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath, are portrayed through Esther’s unique characteristics. Sylvia’s life experiences and personality contribute to these themes: growth through pain, the emptiness of conventional expectations, and the restricted role of women during the 1950’s. Esther must battle through several obstacles in order to move on with her life. She also feels like she does not fit in with society. Women’s role in society during this time also contributes to Esther’s qualities. In order to understand the themes of the novel, one must learn who Sylvia Plath is.
men and women, I saw the world divided into people who had slept with somebody and people who hadn’t, and this seemed the only really significant difference between one person and another. I thought a spectacular change would come over me the day I crossed the boundary line” (Plath, 82). Society says that she will remain a virgin until she marries. She wants to defy conventional expectations by losing her virginity with someone she does not intend to marry, even if that means risking getting pregnant or ruining her own name. She finds it difficult to acquire this sexual identity and the men in her aren’t much help either. Buddy Willard, who had plans to marry Esther, has very traditional views on the roles that men and women should play in a marriage, and then has an affair with a waitress. Esther deems him a hypocrite and decides she can’t marry him. An acquaintance of Esther’s is repulsed by sex, and Marco, a man Esther goes on a blind date with, tries to rape her. When Esther loses her virginity, she doesn’t feel change she expected to feel, but she is satisfied in some ways. Esther acknowledges this gap that exists between what society says her
In The Bell Jar, Esther finds it extremely difficult to put her thoughts into words. She loses friends as she is unable to communicate with them. She lacks relationships due to her silent behaviour. “The silence depresses me. It isn’t the silence of silence. It’s my own silence,” (Plath 18) she says. Although at first Esther feels upset by the lack of connections she has, she loses motivation to even try and explain herself to others. Unlike Mr. Chance in The Cloud Chamber, and Deborah in I Never Promised You a Rose Garden, Esther’s mental state does not improve, and she is unable to resolve lost connections. Esther’s mother tells her, “the cure for thinking too much about yourself is helping somebody who is worse off than you” (Plath 161). However, in her case, she’s so disconnected from the people who were once a big part of her life, that she doesn’t know who to reach out to. She doesn’t see herself being capable of maintaining stable and happy relationships with others when she can’t even maintain her own happiness.
Sylvia Plath, the author of The Bell Jar, writes in a very simple and ordinary but exceptionally unique way. She put her whole young genuine heart and soul into this semi-autobiography. Her first person point of view allows the reader to really engage with the characters thoughts, specifically Esther Greenwood and her perspective on everything. In The Bell Jar, Esther Greenwood encounters the coming of many things, including age and mental illness. While the coming of age is normal for the majority of society, the coming of mental illness is abnormal. With that being said, many may classify Esther Greenwood as abnormal and deviant but in all reality,
Sylvia Plath was a troubled writer to say the least, not only did she endure the loss of her father a young age but she later on “attempted suicide at her home and was hospitalized, where she underwent psychiatric treatment” for her depression (Dunn). Writing primarily as a poet, she only ever wrote a single novel, The Bell Jar. This fictional autobiography “[chronicles] the circumstances of her mental collapse and subsequent suicide attempt” but from the viewpoint of the fictional protagonist, Esther Greenwood, who suffers the same loss and challenges as Plath (Allen 890). Due to the novel’s strong resemblance to Plath’s own history it was published under the pseudonym “Victoria Lucas”. In The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath expresses the
She stops writing, bathing, changing her clothes, and sleeping. This worries her mother, who sends Esther to a psychiatrist who prescribes her to shock therapy. But instead of having the shock treatment healing Esther, the doctors do the procedure improperly and terrify her, which leads her into a living hell.
Perhaps the most famous work of Sylvia Plath’s is The Bell Jar -- a book that follows the mental deterioration of a nineteen-year-old girl named Esther through the narration of Esther herself. Although Sylvia Plath hated life in general and committed suicide at the age of 32 after her husband left her, the myriad autobiographical elements, metaphors, and motifs that appear throughout her works produce a beautifully vivid representation of people, the world, and life itself (“Sylvia Plath”).
The Bell Jar is a novel written in, 1963 written by Sylvia Plath. It is a story about a girl who under goes many traumatic life events that had the destiny to make or break her. The things she used to enjoy in life are no longer bringing joy to her life. She can’t find anything that gives her the will to go on. The Bell Jar is a story that will take reader on a journey with a girl who lets the gender roles of 1950s get the best of her. She lets people tell her what she can and cannot do and loses what it means to become your own person. The Bell Jar teaches the audience about the expectations, opportunities or restrictions on American Women in the 1950’s. As gender roles have become more diverse between a man and a woman, it is still more
Sylvia Plath uses many literary devices to convey her purpose in The Bell Jar such as symbolism. The Bell Jar itself is used as symbolic representation of the emotional state Esther is in. The glass jar distorts her image of the world as she feels trapped under the glass. It represents mental illness; a confining jar that descends over her mind and doesn’t allow her to live and think freely. Symbols of life and death pervade The Bell Jar. Esther experiences psychological distress which is a major motif in the novel. The death of Esther’s father and the relationship with her mother is a possible reason for her illness. Sylvia Plath expresses the difficulties Esther faces and parallels her struggle with depression and illustrates it using various symbols such as a fig tree, mirrors, beating heart and a bell jar throughout the novel.
By just reading Sylvia Plath’s works of writing, it is apparent that she had an infatuation with portraying negative and brutal thoughts. For example, her poem “Daddy,” she clearly expresses her rage towards her deceased father. The poem is full of contradiction and the interpretation is up the reader. Pieces like this gives insight into Sylvia’s mental sanity, which was questioned at times. In her early