Saturday, June 1, 2019
Sylvia Plaths The Bell Jar - Feminist Thought :: Feminism Feminist Women Criticism
The Bell Jar - Feminist Thought The Bell Jar This autobiographic novel by Sylvia Plath follows the story of Esther Greenwood, a third year college student who spends her summer at a ladys fashion magazine in Manhattan. But patronage her high expectations, Esther becomes bored with her give-up the ghost and uncertain about her own future. She even grows estranged from her traditional-minded boyfriend, Buddy Willard, a medical student later diagnosed with TB. Upon returning to her hometown smart England suburb, Esther discovers that she was not selected to take a Harvard summer school fiction course, and subsequently starts to slip into depression. Esther finds herself unable to concentrate and perform daily tasks. Therefore she decides to undergo a few sessions with Dr. Gordon, a psychiatrist, and even undergoes treatments of electroshock therapy. As the depression sinks in, Esther becomes obsessive about suicide, and tries to kill herself by crawling into the cellar where sh e subsequently ingested a nursing bottle of sleeping pills. Esthers attempt fails and she is taken to a city hospital, and then over to a private psychiatric institution by the intervention of a benefactor. As Esther begins to recover, she develops a close relationship with her psychiatrist Dr. Nolan, and eventually leaves the hospital as a transformed woman. This transformation, spiritual reassessment or moral reconciliation is incisively the kind of happy ending described by Fay Weldon. In The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath ends the book with the scene of Esther going into meet the doctors of the mental evaluation board. She is standing foreign the room with Dr. Nolan, observing the people around her and making observations about herself Dont be scared, Doctor Nolan had said.But inspite of Doctor Nolans reassurances, I was scared to death. There ought, I thought, to be a ritual for being born twice patched, retreaded and approved for the road, I was trying to think of an appropriate one when Doctor Nolan appeared out of nowhere and touched me on the shoulder. All right, Esther. I rose and followed her to the door..and guided myself by them (the doctors), as by a magical thread, I stepped into the room. (pg.199) This particular assessment is significant to the rest of the work because Esther goes through a drastic change in order to get where she is now. At the start of the novel, Esther is seen as very intelligent, yet she faces the womans dilemma of choosing between charge and family to the ambivalence of remaining a virgin.
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