Sylvia Plath To Depression Research Paper

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Plath to Depression In American culture, suicide and depression is considered to be one of the darkest taboos. It has the particular quality of being both enticing yet foul. Although suicide and depression are seen as dark, and disturbing, both have made many people famous. Sylvia Plath, on of the most renowned 20th century poetess, is one of them. Plath used many of her poems as ways to cope with her depression and suicide based on certain life events. Plath’s poems such as, “Daddy”, “Tulips”, and “Lady Lazarus” were influenced by life events which later gave people insight to Plath’s suicide at the age of 30. Plath’s difficult life events also caused her to write her most successful poems.
Sylvia Plath was born on October 27th, 1932 of …show more content…

Plath wrote a significant amount of poems, which got a lot of recognition. The speaker of the poem would not specifically be Plath herself talking but, Plath used her life events to surround her poems. One of her earliest writings “Daddy”, was one heavily centered on her father’s death.
"Daddy," comprised of sixteen five-line stanzas, is a brutal poem commonly understood to be about Plath's deceased father, Otto Plath. Overall, the poem relates Plath's journey of coming to terms with her father's looming figure; he died when she was eight. She casts herself as a victim and him as several figures, including a Nazi, vampire, devil, and finally, as a resurrected figure her husband, whom she has also had to kill.
The speaker of Sylvia Plath’s poem “Daddy” is a woman who both passionately loves and fiercely hates her father. The love came from the speaker seeing her father as God when she was a child, and from an obsessive need on the speaker’s part to love and to be loved. The hate came from an intense, deep-rooted fear she felt towards her father, who completely dominated her life. Viewing her unresolved feelings for her father as the root of all her pain and suffering, the adult speaker of this poem is attempting to free herself from her father’s influence. The speaker’s father dies when she is only ten years old. Most normal children are dominated by a parent but are able to break away from that domination as they grow …show more content…

It was originally published in Ariel. Ted Hughes has stated that the poem was written about a bouquet of tulips Plath received as she recovered from an appendectomy in the hospital. She had miscarried just a short time before this operation; probably the second hospital confinement triggered associations with death and birth. These tulips are "like an awful baby." There is something wild and dangerous about them. The poem is comprised of nine seven-line stanzas, and has no rhyme scheme. The main tension in the poem, therefore, is between the speaker’s desire for the simplicity of death and the tulip's encouragement towards life. What attracts her to the sterility of the hospital room is that it allows her to ignore the complications and pains of

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