Sexton Essays

  • Anne Sexton

    1279 Words  | 3 Pages

    Anne Sexton The third decade of the twentieth century brought on more explicit writers than ever before, but none were as expressive as Anne Sexton. Her style of writing, her works, the image that she created, and the crazy life that she led are all prime examples of this. Known as one of the most “confessional” poets of her time, Anne Sexton was also one of the most criticized. She was known to use images of incest, adultery, and madness to reveal the depths of her deeply troubled life, which

  • Essay On Anne Sexton

    2119 Words  | 5 Pages

    contributed to the making of a female writer who would not listen to society but take her own path in poetry. Anne Sexton was more than a housewife, but a woman with real knowledge and troubled mind that lead her to speak the unspeakable in poetry. She was the voice that struggled so dearly to be heard through her confessional style of poetry. 1. Anne Sexton’s Personal Life Anne Gray Harvey Sexton was a famous poet and playwright of her time. She was born in Newton, Massachusetts. Her father was Ralph Harvey

  • Anne Sexton: Poetry as Therapy

    1430 Words  | 3 Pages

    Anne Sexton: Poetry as Therapy Many great literary and artistic geniuses have been troubled with deep depression and mental illness. Anne Sexton is an example of a poet with such problems who used her personal despair to inspire her poetic works. Not all of Sexton's work is based solely on her mental health; but a good portion of her work is influenced by her constant bouts with depression. As she struggled to deal with her own marital infidelity and the problems associated with being a female

  • Comparing Feminist Poetry by Plath and Sexton

    1203 Words  | 3 Pages

    Comparing Feminist Poetry by Plath and Sexton Poetry "should be a shock to the senses. It should also hurt" Anne Sexton believed (Baym 2703), and evidence of this maxim's implications echoes loudly through the writing of Sexton as well as through the work of her friend and contemporary Sylvia Plath. Plath and Sexton's lifetimes spanned a period of remarkable change in the social role of women in America, and both are obviously feminist poets caught somewhere between the submissive pasts of

  • Anne Sexton : Life into Art

    3818 Words  | 8 Pages

    Anne Sexton : Life into Art A story, a story! (Let it go. Let it come.) I was stamped out like a Plymouth fender into this world. First came the crib with its glacial bars. Then dolls and the devotion to their plastic mouths. Then there was school, the little straight rows of chairs, blotting my name over and over, but undersea all the time, a stranger whose elbows wouldn't work. Then there was life with its cruel houses and people who seldom touched - though touch is all-

  • A Woman Like That, Anne Sexton

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    persona. Many people believed that the “I” in the poem was referring to Anne Sexton. Anne was often labeled as a confessional poet. From Sexton’s point of view confessional poetry is poetry of suffering. The suffering is generally unbearable because the poetry is often about a psychological breakdown. The psychological condition of most confessional poets, including Anne Sexton, has been subject to many literary discussions. Sexton would use her own personal experience from life to create her poems. After

  • Comparing Imagery in Frost's Acquainted with the Night and Sexton 's Her Kind

    843 Words  | 2 Pages

    Imagery in Frost's Acquainted with the Night and Sexton 's Her Kind In order to maximize meaning and overall total effect of a piece of work, writers use various literary devices.  These techniques enhance the author's work and add a dimension that results in higher reader satisfaction.  Throughout the poems I have read this quarter thus far, I have discovered the use of imagery as a prominent source of literary embellishment.  In particular the image of night is used in poems "Acquainted with

  • Deception Point

    1075 Words  | 3 Pages

    beneath the Arctic ice. The finding, a 300 years old meteorite with fossil, is made public during the presidential elections and this is a devastating blow for Senator Sexton who has been criticising NASA for errors throughout the campaign. The president sends Rachel Sexton ,a White House intelligence analyst and daughter to senator Sexton , along with four other ordinary scientists and a team of highly ranked NASA scientists up to the Arctic to verify and confirm the authenticity of the finding. Soon

  • Characterization in The Minister’s Black Veil

    2733 Words  | 6 Pages

    are built on a “single idea or quality” and are presented without much “individualizing detail” (Abrams 33). The sexton, Elizabeth, Goodman, the visiting divine, the nurse, etc. serve as foils to Mr. Hooper. There is only one well-developed, or three dimensional character, in this short story, and he is  the protagonist, Reverend Mr. Hooper. At the outset of the tale, the sexton, a flat or type character, is tolling the church bell and simultaneously watching Mr. Hoop... ... middle of paper

  • Do not go gentle into that Good Night and for Eleanor Boylan talking with God

    1199 Words  | 3 Pages

    passive and quiet and more driven by sorrow than anger. But as there is an underlying sense of sorrow in Thomas’ villanelle, there is also a sense of quiet anger. In “For Eleanor Boylan Talking With God”, Sexton expresses the pain of losing a loved one. There is a surreal quality to the poem, Sexton seems to write as she thinks with a thought inciting a memory; she communicates her feelings in a very literal concrete way but the poem is still very abstract because there is so little linking these images

  • Anne Sexton

    1725 Words  | 4 Pages

    Santa, the Easter Bunny and Cinderella were characters we fondly remembered. But although we recognized these figures and legends as illusions, we held on to many of the sentiments the stories, without questioning their application to adult life. Anne Sexton often uses these innocent, childlike images juxtaposed with cynical but more realistic situations in order show that the lessons society teaches children, ones that children retain as adults, are illusions that do not properly illustrate the corrupt

  • Ahab and Una's Incestuous Relationship in Naslund's Novel, Ahab's Wife

    1066 Words  | 3 Pages

    something which he could never truly hope to find in his wife. Just as the king in the Briar Rose Ulysses would have "force every male in the court/to scour his tongue with Bab-o/ lest they poison the air she dwelt in/ thus she dwelt in his odor./" ( Sexton he wanted to have her mind in his hands for his molding. He was looking for reflective surface from which he could evaluate his story, or at lest the story which he has come to tell himself. This story consisted of many parts all of which would then

  • Anne Sexton Cinderella

    1076 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the poem “Cinderella”, Anne Sexton illustrates the unrealistic expectations that fairy tales put into the minds of young women. The story of “Cinderella” has many versions in both print and film. Millions of dollars are generated annually with romance novels and romantic comedies commonly dubbed chick flicks. All versions share a similar story, a young lady meets a man and her life is then happy, fruitful, carefree and complete. These images are nothing more than fairy tales but they set expectations

  • definition paper

    622 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cinderella is a classic story that has had many different versions. Anne Sexton’s version, begins as Cinderella’s mother is on her death bed. She is telling Cinderella to “Be Devout. Be Good. Then I will smile down from heaven in the seam of a cloud.” (Sexton 85) With the death of Cinderella’s mother, we get Bettelheim’s first example of a Fairy Tale; adversity for Cinderella. As the story goes on, Cinderella’s father marries another woman. She has two daughters, making a family of five. Cinderella’s father

  • Homage To My Hips Analysis

    1405 Words  | 3 Pages

    feelings regarding taboo subjects, such as death, trauma, mental illness, and gender and class consciousness, and is often autobiographical (Academy of American Poets). Much of the poetry written by Lucille Clifton, Sylvia Plath, Adrienne Rich, and Anne Sexton is confessional poetry. Lucille Clifton’s poem, “homage to my hips” deals with a situation related to gender consciousness, while also briefly touching on the topic of slavery and the oppression of women. The poem focuses on the narrator’s hips

  • Analysis Of For Lizzie And Harriet, By Robert Lowell

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    adolescence, it also appears that his genuine attempt to impart some wisdom to his daughter is one made as a result of some emotional growth. The reader is presented with a powerful image of a man who i... ... middle of paper ... ...ate to this feeling. Sexton goes on to describe her passion for death, which far outweighs her passion for life. She feels there is an art to death. She beleieves suicide will provide relief. These immensely private thoughts are disturbing to the reader, who is able to infer

  • Anne Sexton: Cinderella

    1183 Words  | 3 Pages

    a basis of the true tale to make what many would call a “mockery” of the original Grimm Tale. Sexton does not refer to the Grimm brothers in her poem, for she considers this re-telling her own creation, uniquely by using irony to her advantage. As an audience we can relate to how and why Sexton takes much from the original versions, but we find that her interpretation brings a different approach. Sexton felt the original versions held no light to reality, so she changed the shallow premise of the

  • Anne Sexton Narcissism

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    psychiatrists, Sexton began writing poetry as an emotional outlet that led to her publishing books of poems and won a Pulitzer Prize. She became a part of a group of writers who included personal moments in their poetry

  • Anne Sexton Cinderella

    1108 Words  | 3 Pages

    being not real and made up, but they never warn children about fairy tales. Fairytales are to be hopes and desires and something every little girl should want to have when they grow up, and not unrealistic or demeaning like the real world is. In Anne Sexton poem “Cinderella” the narrator tales a tale that most people grew up on what seems to be a princess story. This story is unlike the rest. At the beginning of the poem, Cinderella’s mother dies, and her father soon remarried another woman who had two

  • Analysis Of Cinderella By Anne Sexton

    749 Words  | 2 Pages

    The poem “Cinderella” by Anne Sexton tells the story of Cinderella but differently then the beloved fairy tale portrayed by Walt Disney. Sexton emphases the way the Grimm Brothers told the story of Cinderella. Readers will feel a sense of hatred toward the idea of Disney’s version of the story. Sexton shows the Cinderella story in a more realistic way and explains how not everything will have a happy-ever-after. In the first four stanzas of the poem Sexton makes fun of these unrealistic fairy