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Not What You Meant?  There are 23 definitions for Sylvia.  Also try: Colossus or Collected Poems or Wuthering Heights or Finisterre.

Plath, Sylvia 1932–1963: Critical Essay by Calvin Bedient

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About 10 pages (2,901 words)
Sylvia Plath Summary

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Sylvia Plath was a romantic of the most self-cancelling kind. She reduced romanticism to a fever, a scream of defiance; but romantic she was, and exactly to the degree that she was alive and struggling. Her romanticism was her wish to live, if at times only in that touchingly qualified transcendence (located on no one's map of earth or heaven) where she could be born once again as her father's little girl. (p. 3)

Crushing, nearly Kafkaesque as this father worship was, it is nonetheless moving. No embrace more longed for, more healing and validating than the father's. For so judgment gets a heart, distance takes us up and hugs us to the source of power. Plath is our scapegoat, the child who needed this blessing more, who would not give up asking for it until the effort killed her.

This is a free excerpt of 139 words. There are 2,901 words (approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Plath, Sylvia 1932–1963: Critical Essay by Calvin Bedient from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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