Sylvia Plath Research Paper

409 Words1 Page

Sylvia Plath is regarded as one of the most affective feminist voices who cry out against patriarchal societies. Plath’s feminist message stands against dehumanization, displacement, alienation, exploitation, and objectification of women in the patriarchal communities. Many of her poems such as “Daddy”, “ The Applicant”, “The Colossus,” and “Purdah”, show her a great concern about women who are considered a minority and represent their sufferings. The personas of her poems illustrate the women’s sufferings in the patriarchal societies throughout. She aims to emancipate women from remaining slaves forced to do all what men ask them by presenting the strong women who reject the patriarchal norms which restrict women and regard them as the inferior part of the society. Throughout her poems, she keeps mocking at patriarchal women who enslave themselves to achieve satisfaction of the opposite gender. Furthermore, her poems reveal that she against enslaving women or using them according to the males’ needs and desires. Also, She is against justifying males’ prejudice which leads to the unfair …show more content…

As an orphan daughter, she mourns her father in deferent and contradicted ways. Her poem "Daddy" revolves around her awakening after the death of her dominated father and explains that she does not need him because she learns how to value herself without his existence. Likewise, Plath’s “ The Colossus” illustrates the sufferings of the daughter who also lost her father but never keeps praising him and considering him as a statue or monument. Obviously, Sylvia Plath succeeds in portraying the sufferings of the oppressed women in the patriarchal societies and these two poems demonstrate her ambivalent feelings towards her father and other

Open Document