Biography
Early life and education
Plath was born on October 27, 1932, inCollege years and depression
In 1950, Plath attended Smith College, a private women's liberal arts college in Massachusetts, where she excelled academically. While at Smith, she lived in Lawrence House, and a plaque can be found outside her old room. She edited ''The Smith Review.'' After her third year of college, Plath was awarded a coveted position as a guest editor at '' Mademoiselle'' magazine, during which she spent a month in New York City. The experience was not what she had hoped for, and many of the events that took place during that summer were later used as inspiration for her novel '' The Bell Jar''. She was furious at not being at a meeting that ''Mademoiselle'' editor Cyrilly Abels had arranged with Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, a writer whose work she loved, according to one of her boyfriends, "more than life itself". She loitered around the White Horse Tavern and the Chelsea Hotel for two days, hoping to meet Thomas, but he was already on his way home. A few weeks later, she slashed her legs "to see if she had enough courage to kill herself." During this time, she was not accepted into aCareer and marriage
Plath met poet Ted Hughes on February 25, 1956. In a 1961 BBC interview now held by the British Library Sound Archive, Extract from the 1961 BBC interview with Plath and Hughes. Now held in theFinal depressive episode and death
Before her death, Plath tried at least twice to take her own life. On August 24, 1953, she overdosed on sleeping pills; then, in June 1962, she drove her car off the side of the road into a river, which she later characterized as a suicide attempt. In January 1963, Plath spoke with John Horder, her general practitioner. She described the current depressive episode she was experiencing; it had been ongoing for six or seven months. While for most of the time she had been able to continue working, her depression had worsened and become severe, "marked by constant agitation, suicidal thoughts and inability to cope with daily life." Plath struggled with insomnia, taking medication at night to induce sleep, and frequently woke up early. She had lost 20 pounds (9 kg) in a short time. However, she continued to take care of her physical appearance and did not outwardly speak of feeling guilty or unworthy. Horder prescribed her an anti-depressant, a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, a few days before her suicide. Knowing she was at risk with two young children, he made strenuous efforts to have her admitted to a hospital; when that failed, he arranged for a live-in nurse. Hughes claimed in a hand-written note to the literary critic Keith Sagar, discovered in 2001, that the anti-depressants prescribed were a "key factor" in Plath's suicide. He said Plath had previously had an adverse reaction to a prescription she had taken when they lived in the U.S. These pills were sold in England under a different name, and although Hughes did not name the pills explicitly, he claimed a new doctor had prescribed them to Plath without realizing she had taken them before with adverse effects. Several commentators have argued that because anti-depressants may take up to three weeks to take effect, her prescription from Horder would not have taken full effect prior to her death; however, others have pointed out that adverse effects of anti-depressants can begin immediately. The live-in nurse was due to arrive at nine on the morning of February 11, 1963, to help Plath with the care of her children. Upon arrival, she could not get into the flat but eventually gained access with the help of a workman. They found Plath dead with her head in the oven, having sealed the rooms between her and her sleeping children with tape, towels, and cloths. She was 30years old. Plath's intentions have been debated. That morning, she asked her downstairs neighbor, art historian Trevor Thomas (1907–1993), what time he would be leaving. She also left a note reading "Call Dr. Horder", including the doctor's phone number. It is argued Plath turned on the gas at a time when Thomas would have been likely to see the note, but the escaping gas seeped downstairs and also rendered Thomas unconscious while he slept. However, in her biography ''Giving Up: The Last Days of Sylvia Plath'', Plath's friend Jillian Becker wrote, "According to Mr. Goodchild, a police officer attached to the coroner's office... lathhad thrust her head far into the gas oven... ndhad really meant to die." Horder also believed her intention was clear. He stated that "No one who saw the care with which the kitchen was prepared could have interpreted her action as anything but an irrational compulsion." Plath had described the quality of her despair as "owl's talons clenching my heart".Aftermath
An inquest was held on February 15 and concluded that the cause of death was suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning. Hughes was devastated; they had been separated for six months, due to his affair with Assia Wevill. In a letter to an old friend of Plath's from Smith College, he wrote: "That's the end of my life. The rest is posthumous." Wevill also committed suicide, using a gas stove, six years later. Plath's gravestone in Heptonstall's parish churchyard of St. Thomas the Apostle bears the inscription that Hughes chose for her: "Even amidst fierce flames the golden lotus can be planted." Biographers have attributed the source of the quote either to the Hindu text '' The Bhagavad Gita'' or to the 16th-century Buddhist novel '' Journey to the West'' written by Wu Cheng'en. Eight years after the death of Plath, Al Alvarez (a friend of Plath and Hughes between 1960 and 1963) wrote that Plath's suicide was an unanswered cry for help. This prompted an angry response from Hughes who demanded that this claim be withdrawn from wider publication. In a BBC interview in March 2000, Alvarez spoke about his failure to recognize Plath's depression, saying he regretted his inability to offer her emotional support. Plath's daughter Frieda Hughes is a writer and artist. On March 16, 2009, Plath's son Nicholas Hughes died by suicide at his home in Fairbanks, Alaska, following a history of depression.Works
Plath wrote poetry from the age of 8, her first poem appearing in the '' Boston Traveller''. By the time she arrived at Smith College, she had written over 50 short stories, and her work had been published in numerous magazines. At Smith, she majored in English literature and won all the major prizes in writing and scholarship, including literary prizes for her poetry. Additionally, she received a summer editor position at the young women's magazine '' Mademoiselle''. On her graduation in 1955, she won the Glascock Prize for " Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea". Later, at Cambridge, she wrote for the university publication '' Varsity''. Alvarez clearly views Plath as part of a generation that helped establish a new artistic myth. In contrast to the Eliot generation, which championed the impersonality of art and the “extinction of personality” in creative expression, Plath and her contemporaries fused their inner lives with their artistic output. As Alzarez puts it, this is a form of art in which “the barriers between the artist’s work and his life are forever shifting and crumbling.”''The Colossus''
By the time Heinemann published her first collection, ''The Colossus and Other Poems'' in the UK in late 1960, Plath had been short-listed several times in the Yale Younger Poets book competition and had her work printed in '' Harper's'', '' The Spectator'' and '' The Times Literary Supplement''. All the poems in ''The Colossus'' had been printed in major U.S. and British journals, and she had a contract with ''The New Yorker''. It was, however, her 1965 collection ''Ariel'', published posthumously, on which Plath's reputation essentially rests. "Often, her work is singled out for the intense coupling of its violent or disturbed imagery and its playful use of alliteration and rhyme." ''The Colossus'' received largely positive UK reviews, highlighting Plath's voice as new and strong, individual and American in tone. Peter Dickinson at '' Punch'' called the collection "a real find" and "exhilarating to read", full of "clean, easy verse". Bernard Bergonzi at the ''Manchester Guardian'' wrote the book was an "outstanding technical accomplishment" with a "virtuoso quality". From the point of publication, she became a presence on the poetry scene. The book was published in America in 1962 to less-glowing reviews. While her craft was generally praised, her writing was viewed by some critics at the time as more derivative of other poets.''The Bell Jar''
Plath's semi-autobiographical novel—her mother wanted to block publication—was published in 1963 and in the US in 1971. Describing the compilation of the book to her mother, she wrote, "What I've done is to throw together events from my own life, fictionalizing to add color—it's a pot boiler really, but I think it will show how isolated a person feels when he is suffering a breakdown... I've tried to picture my world and the people in it as seen through the distorting lens of a bell jar". She described her novel as "an autobiographical apprentice work which I had to write in order to free myself from the past". Plath dated a Yale senior named Dick Norton during her junior year. Norton, upon whom the character of Buddy in '' The Bell Jar'' is based, contracted tuberculosis and was treated at the Ray Brook Sanatorium. While visiting Norton, Plath broke her leg skiing, an incident that was fictionalized in the novel. Plath also used the novel to highlight the issue of women in the workforce during the 1950s. She strongly believed in women's abilities to be writers and editors while society forced them to fulfill secretarial roles:Now with me, writing is the first delight in life. I want time and money to write, both very necessary. I will not sacrifice my time to learn shorthand because I do not want any of the jobs which shorthand would open up, although those jobs are no doubt very interesting for girls who want them. I do not want the rigid hours of a magazine or publishing job. I do not want to type other people's letters and read their manuscripts. I want to type my own and write my own. So secretarial training is out for me. That I know. (Sylvia Plath's letter to her mother, 10 Feb 1955)
''Double Exposure''
In 1963, after ''The Bell Jar'' was published, Plath began working on another literary work, titled ''Double Exposure'', which was never published. According to Ted Hughes in 1979, Plath left behind a typescript of "some 130 pages", but in 1995 he spoke of just "sixty, seventy pages". Olwyn Hughes wrote in 2003 that the typescript may have consisted of the first two chapters, and did not exceed sixty pages.''Ariel''
The posthumous publication of '' Ariel'' in 1965 precipitated Plath's rise to fame. The poems in ''Ariel'' mark a departure from her earlier work into a more personal arena of poetry. Robert Lowell's poetry may have played a part in this shift as she cited Lowell's 1959 book '' Life Studies'' as a significant influence, in an interview just before her death. The impact of ''Ariel'' was dramatic, with its dark and potentially autobiographical descriptions of mental illness in poems such as " Tulips", " Daddy" and " Lady Lazarus". Plath's work is often held within the genre of confessional poetry and the style of her work compared to other contemporaries, such as Lowell and W.D. Snodgrass. Plath's close friend Al Alvarez, who wrote about her extensively, said of her later work: "Plath's case is complicated by the fact that, in her mature work, she deliberately used the details of her everyday life as raw material for her art. A casual visitor or unexpected telephone call, a cut, a bruise, a kitchen bowl, a candlestick—everything became usable, charged with meaning, transformed. Her poems are full of references and images that seem impenetrable at this distance, but which could mostly be explained in footnotes by a scholar with full access to the details of her life." Many of Plath's later poems deal with what one critic calls the "domestic surreal" in which Plath takes everyday elements of life and twists the images, giving them an almost nightmarish quality. Plath's poem "Morning Song" from ''Ariel'' is regarded as one of her finest poems on ''freedom of expression'' of an artist. Plath's fellow confessional poet and friend Anne Sexton commented: "Sylvia and I would talk at length about our first suicide, in detail and in depth—between the free potato chips. Suicide is, after all, the opposite of the poem. Sylvia and I often talked opposites. We talked death with burned-up intensity, both of us drawn to it like moths to an electric lightbulb, sucking on it. She told the story of her first suicide in sweet and loving detail, and her description in ''The Bell Jar'' is just that same story." The confessional interpretation of Plath's work has led to some dismissing certain aspects of her work as an exposition of sentimentalist melodrama; in 2010, for example, Theodore Dalrymple asserted that Plath had been the "patron saint of self-dramatisation" and of self-pity. Revisionist critics such as Tracy Brain have, however, argued against a tightly autobiographical interpretation of Plath's material. On January 16, 2004, The Independent newspaper in London published an article that ranked ''Ariel'' as the 3rd best book of modern poetry among 'The 10 Best Modern Poetry Books.'Other works
In 1971, the volumes ''Winter Trees'' and ''Crossing the Water'' were published in the UK, including nine previously unseen poems from the original manuscript of ''Ariel''. Writing in '' New Statesman'', fellow poet Peter Porter wrote: The ''Collected Poems'', published in 1981, edited and introduced by Ted Hughes, contained poetry written from 1956 until her death. Plath posthumously was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. In 2006, Anna Journey, then a graduate student at Virginia Commonwealth University, discovered a previously unpublished sonnet written by Plath titled "Ennui". The poem, composed during Plath's early years at Smith College, was published in the online journal '' Blackbird''.Journals and letters
Plath's letters were published in 1975, edited and selected by her mother Aurelia Plath. The collection ''Letters Home: Correspondence 1950–1963'' came out partly in response to the strong public reaction to the publication of ''The Bell Jar'' in America. Plath started writing in her diary on January 1, 1944, at the age of 11 and continued until her death by suicide in February 1963. Her early diaries remain unpublished and are currently at Indiana University Bloomington. Her adult diaries, starting from her first year at Smith College in 1950, were published in 1982 as ''The Journals of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Frances McCullough, with Ted Hughes as consulting editor. In 1982, when Smith College acquired Plath's remaining journals, Hughes sealed two of them until February 11, 2013, the 50th anniversary of Plath's death. During the last years of his life, Hughes began working on a fuller publication of Plath's journals. In 1998, shortly before his death, he unsealed the two journals, and passed the project onto his children by Plath, Frieda and Nicholas, who passed it on to Karen V. Kukil, who finished her editing in December 1999. In 2000 Anchor Books published ''The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath''. More than half of the new volume contained newly released material; the American authorHughes controversies
As Hughes and Plath were legally married at the time of her death, Hughes inherited the Plath estate, including all her written work. He has been condemned repeatedly for burning Plath's last journal, saying he "did not want her children to have to read it". Hughes lost another journal and an unfinished novel, and instructed that a collection of Plath's papers and journals should not be released until 2013. He has been accused of attempting to control the estate for his own ends, although royalties from Plath's poetry were placed into a trust account for their two children, Frieda and Nicholas. Plath's gravestone has been repeatedly vandalized by those aggrieved that "Hughes" is written on the stone; they have attempted to chisel it off, leaving only the name "Sylvia Plath". When Hughes' mistress Assia Wevill died by suicide and killed their four-year-old daughter Shura in 1969, this practice intensified. After each defacement, Hughes had the damaged stone removed, sometimes leaving the site unmarked during repair. Outraged mourners accused Hughes in the media of dishonouring her name by removing the stone. Wevill's death led to claims that Hughes had been abusive to both Plath and Wevill. Radical feminist poet Robin Morgan published the poem "Arraignment", in which she openly accused Hughes of the battery and murder of Plath. Her book ''Monster'' (1972) "included a piece in which a gang of Plath aficionados are imagined castrating Hughes, stuffing his penis into his mouth and then blowing out his brains"."Sorrows of a Polygamist"Themes and legacy
Sylvia Plath's early poems exhibit what became her typical imagery, using personal and nature-based depictions featuring, for example, the moon, blood, hospitals, fetuses, and skulls. They were mostly imitation exercises of poets she admired such as Dylan Thomas, W. B. Yeats and Marianne Moore. Late in 1959, when she and Hughes were at the Yaddo writers' colony in New York State, she wrote the seven-part " Poem for a Birthday", echoing Theodore Roethke's ''Lost Son'' sequence, though its theme is her own traumatic breakdown and suicide attempt at 21. After 1960 her work moved into a more surreal landscape darkened by a sense of imprisonment and looming death, overshadowed by her father. ''The Colossus'' is filled with themes of death, redemption and resurrection. After Hughes left, Plath produced, in less than two months, the 40 poems of rage, despair, love, and vengeance on which her reputation mostly rests. Plath's landscape poetry, which she wrote throughout her life, has been described as "a rich and important area of her work that is often overlooked...some of the best of which was written about the Yorkshire moors". Her September 1961 poem "Wuthering Heights" takes its title from the Emily Brontë novel, but its content and style is Plath's own particular vision of the Pennine landscape. It was the posthumous publication of ''Ariel'' in 1965 that precipitated Plath's rise to fame and helped establish her reputation as one of the 20th century's best poets. As soon as it was published, critics began to see the collection as the charting of Plath's increasing desperation or death wish. Her dramatic death became her most famous aspect and remains so. ''Time'' and ''Life'' both reviewed the slim volume of ''Ariel'' in the wake of her death. The critic at ''Time'' said: "Within a week of her death, intellectual London was hunched over copies of a strange and terrible poem she had written during her last sick slide toward suicide. 'Daddy' was its title; its subject was her morbid love-hatred of her father; its style was as brutal as a truncheon. What is more, 'Daddy' was merely the first jet of flame from a literary dragon who in the last months of her life breathed a burning river of bile across the literary landscape...In her most ferocious poems, 'Daddy' and 'Lady Lazarus', fear, hate, love, death and the poet's own identity become fused at black heat with the figure of her father, and through him, with the guilt of the German exterminators and the suffering of their Jewish victims. They are poems, as Robert Lowell says in his preface to ''Ariel'', that 'play Russian roulette with six cartridges in the cylinder'." On January 16, 2004, ''The Independent'' in London published an article which ranked ''Ariel'' as the third best book of modern poetry among its Ten Best Modern Poetry Books. Some in the feminist movement saw Plath as speaking for their experience, as a "symbol of blighted female genius". Writer Honor Moore describes ''Ariel'' as marking the beginning of a movement, Plath suddenly visible as "a woman on paper", certain and audacious. Moore says: "When Sylvia Plath's ''Ariel'' was published in the United States in 1966, American women noticed. Not only women who ordinarily read poems, but housewives and mothers whose ambitions had awakened ... Here was a woman, superbly trained in her craft, whose final poems uncompromisingly charted female rage, ambivalence, and grief, in a voice with which many women identified." Smith College, Plath's alma mater, holds her literary papers in the Smith College Library. The United States Postal Service introduced a postage stamp featuring Plath in 2012. An English Heritage plaque records Plath's residence at 3 Chalcot Square, in London. In 2013 a previously unseen draft of her poem "Sheep in Fog", written two weeks before her death, revealed her disturbed state of mind. In 2018, ''Portrayals in media
Plath's voice is heard in a BBC documentary about her life, recorded in London in late 1962. Of the BBC recording Elizabeth Hardwick wrote: Gwyneth Paltrow portrayed Plath in the biopic '' Sylvia'' (2003). Elizabeth Sigmund, who was friends with both Plath and Hughes, criticized the movie for depicting Sylvia as "a permanent depressive and a possessive person", but she conceded that "the film has an atmosphere towards the end of her life which is heartbreaking in its accuracy". Frieda Hughes, who was only two years old when she lost her mother, was angered by the making of entertainment featuring her parents' troubled marriage and her mother's death. She accused the "peanut crunching" public of wanting to be titillated by her family's tragedies. In 2003, Frieda reacted to the situation in the poem "My Mother", first published in '' Tatler'':Musical settings
* In his '' Ariel: Five Poems of Sylvia Plath'' (1971), American composer Ned Rorem has set for soprano, clarinet and piano the poems "Words", "Poppies In July", "The Hanging Man", "Poppies In October", and " Lady Lazarus." * Also drawing from '' Ariel'', in his ''Six Poems by Sylvia Plath'' for solo soprano (1975), German composer Aribert Reimann has set the poems "Edge", "Sheep In Fog", "The Couriers", "The Night Dances", and "Words." He later set " Lady Lazarus" (1992), also for solo soprano. * Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho's five-part ''From the Grammar of Dreams'' for soprano and mezzo a cappella (1988) is constructed on a collage of fragments from '' The Bell Jar'' and the poem "Paralytic." The piece was also arranged by the composer into a version for soprano and electronics (2002), in which the singer sings in interaction with a recorded double of her own voice. Albeit composed as a concert piece, ''From the Grammar of Dreams'' has also been staged. * American composer Juliana Hall's ''Lorelei'' (1989) for mezzo, horn, and piano is a setting of Plath's poem of the same name. Hall had previously set "The Night Dances" as a movement of her cycle for soprano and piano ''Night Dances'' (1987) featuring texts by five female poets, and went on to write a song cycle for soprano and piano entirely devoted to Plath, ''Crossing The Water'' (2011), which comprises the poems "Street Song", "Crossing The Water", "Rhyme", and "Alicante Lullaby." * In her cycle for soprano and piano ''The Blood Jet'' (2006), American composer Lori Leitman set the poems "Morning Song", "The Rival", "Kindness", and "Balloons."Publication list
Poetry collections
* '' The Colossus and Other Poems'' (1960, William Heinemann) * '' Ariel'' (1965, Faber and Faber) * ''Three Women: A Monologue for Three Voices'' (1968, Turret Books) * '' Crossing the Water'' (1971, Faber and Faber) * '' Winter Trees'' (1971, Faber and Faber) * ''The Collected Poems'' (1981, Faber and Faber) * ''Selected Poems'' (1985, Faber and Faber) * ''Ariel: The Restored Edition'' (2004, Faber and Faber)Collected prose and novels
* '' The Bell Jar'', under the pseudonym "Victoria Lucas" (novel, 1963, Heinemann) * '' Letters Home: Correspondence 1950–1963'' (1975, Harper & Row, US; Faber and Faber, UK) * '' Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams: Short Stories, Prose, and Diary Excerpts'' (1977, Faber and Faber) * ''The Journals of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Ted Hughes and Frances McCullough (1982, Dial Press) * ''The Magic Mirror'' (1989), Plath's Smith College senior thesis * ''The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Karen V. Kukil (2000, Anchor Books) * ''The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume 1'', edited by Peter K. Steinberg and Karen V. Kukil (2017, Faber and Faber) * ''The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume 2'', edited by Peter K. Steinberg and Karen V. Kukil (2018, Faber and Faber) * ''Mary Ventura and the Ninth Kingdom'' (2019, Faber and Faber) * ''The Collected Prose of Sylvia Plath'', edited by Peter K. Steinberg (2024, Faber and Faber)Children's books
* ''The Bed Book'', illustrated by Quentin Blake (1976, Faber and Faber) * ''The It-Doesn't-Matter Suit'' (1996, Faber and Faber) * ''Mrs. Cherry's Kitchen'' (2001, Faber and Faber) * ''Collected Children's Stories'' (UK, 2001, Faber and Faber)See also
* Sylvia Plath effectReferences
Notes
Citations
Sources
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *Further reading
* Axelrod, Steven Gould. (1992). ''Sylvia Plath: The Wound and the Cure of Words''. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University. . * * * * * * * Hayman, Ronald. (1991). ''The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath''. Secaucus, New Jersey: Carol Publishing. . * Hemphill, Stephanie. (2007). ''Your Own, Sylvia: A Verse Portrait of Sylvia Plath''. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. . * Kyle, Barry. (1976). ''Sylvia Plath: A Dramatic Portrait; Conceived and Adapted from Her Writings''. London: Faber and Faber. . * Malcolm, Janet. (1995). ''The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes''. New York: Vintage. . * * Middlebrook, Diane. (2003). ''Her Husband: Hughes and Plath – a Marriage''. New York: Viking. * * * * * * Tabor, Stephen. (1988). ''Sylvia Plath: An Analytical Bibliography''. London: Mansell. . * * * Wagner, Erica. (2002). ''Ariel's Gift: Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and the Story of Birthday Letters''. New York: W. W. Norton. . * Wagner-Martin, Linda. (2003). ''Sylvia Plath: A Literary Life''. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. .External links
* * Peter K. Steinberg'