Sylvia Plath's Poetry: Feminine Perfection
"Almost all of Sylvia Plath's poems seem to be written by a perfectionist.", writes Marcia Dahlman in Being Perfect. Plath transmutes the domestic and the ordinary into the hallucinatory, the utterly strange. Her revision of the romantic ego dramatizes its tendency toward disproportion and excess, and she is fully capable of both using and mocking the heightened sense of self, as she does in her poem "Lady Lazarus". Just as Lazarus was raised from the dead by Jesus (John 11.1-45), so too Sylvia Plath says,
"Dying
Is an art, like everything else.
I do it exceptionally well ....
Word count: 885 - Page count: 4
|
|
GotPapers has one of the largest term paper databases online. Join today to view this essay and over 45000 other essays in our members' only section.
Your subsription is activated immediately after payment, which is perfect for those times when you are up late working on an important
paper that is due tomorrow.
Membership Option |
Price |
PayPal |
30 days (recurring) |
$19.95 |
90 days (recurring) |
$39.95 |
180 days (non-recurring) |
$69.95 |
|
|
|