"With the bravado and despair of a young person, she tore apart the elegant poetic forms of the 1950s, and, using the raw language of everyday speech, she gave voice to the storms that raged inside her, thus freeing herself from the nightmarish visions that had long tormented her. In her novel The Bell Jar, she leads us into the dark corridors of the inner hell that led to her mental breakdown and brought her to the brink of her first attempt at suicide. It is a cruel, stifling world, whose black gates carry the inscription "no exit." Plath took the fact that she was the daughter of parents of German origin as the symbolic definition of her life. It was a fact that could neither be denied nor changed. In her poems, she called the father whom she loved, and who died when she was a child, a Nazi bastard. She, the Aryan child of the postwar generation, reimagined herself as symbolically Jewish, estranged, persecuted, rejected, and condemned."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Essayists from the United StatesShort story writers from the United StatesDiaristsNovelists from BostonPoets from Boston
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Chava Rosenfarb Zweig, the German Language, and Suicide in Confessions of a Yiddish Writer and Other Essays, translated from the Yiddish with Goldie Morgentaler
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Sylvia_Plath
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Sylvia Plath
1932 β 1963
US-amerikanische Dichterin und Schriftstellerin
91 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Sylvia Plath β
Related Quotes
"So many of us! So many of us!We are shelves, we are Tables, we are meek, We are edible,Nudgers and shovers In spite oβ¦"
"It was a queer, sultry summer, the summer they electrocuted the Rosenbergs, and I didn't know what I was doing in Newβ¦"
"What did my fingers do before they held him? What did my heart do, with its love?"
"I happened to be at Cambridge. I was sent there by the [US] government on a government grant. And I'd read some of Teβ¦"
"I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead; I lift my lids and all is born again."
"How frail the human heart must be β a mirrored pool of thought."
"I am jealous of men. I envy the man his physical freedom to lead a double life."
"I am deeply grateful to the women who really blazed the way-poets like Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath and Maxine Kumin."
"Being born a woman is my awful tragedy."
"The silence depressed me. It wasn't the silence of silence. It was my own silence. I knew perfectly well the cars werβ¦"