Image for Revising Life : Sylvia Plath's Ariel Poems

Revising Life : Sylvia Plath's Ariel Poems (New ed)

Part of the Gender and American culture series
See all formats and editions

'Provides a compelling argument for Plath's revision of the painful parts of her life--the failed marriage, her anxiety for success, and her ambivalence towards her mother. . . . The reader will feel the tension in the poetry and the life.' Choice '[Examines] Plath's twin goals of becoming a famous poet and a perfect mother. . . . This book's main points are clearly and forcefully argued: that both poems and babies require 'struggle, pain, endless labor, and . . . fears of monstrous offspring' and that, in the end, Plath ran out of the resources necessary to produce both.

Often maligned as a self-indulgent confessional poet, Plath is here retrieved as a passionate theorist.'-- Library Journal Susan Van Dyne's reading of twenty-five of Sylvia Plath's Ariel poems considers three contexts: Plath's journal entries from 1957 to 1959 (especially as they reveal her conflicts over what it meant to be a middle-class wife and mother and an aspiring writer in 1950s America); the interpretive strategies of feminist theory; and Plath's multiple revisions of the poems.

Read More
Available
£38.66 Save 10.00%
RRP £42.95
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
080784487X / 9780807844878
Paperback / softback
811.54
30/08/1994
United States
English
224 pages
156 x 235 mm, 313 grams
DC Poetry