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Gender And Race By Sylvia Plath

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Rebecca Meyer
Sylvia Plath and Robert Hayden: Gender and Race

Sylvia Plath and Robert Hayden are two famous American poets who significantly contributed to America’s literary canon and captured many facets of American history and identity. Though they came from very different backgrounds, both poets challenged and confronted themes in their works respective to their own experiences. As a female poet, Plath addressed themes of feminism; as an African-American male, Hayden addressed racial inequality. In her poem "The Applicant," Plath takes a sarcastic and condescending approach to highlight the objectification of women in the modern day marriage structure. In his poem "Night, Death, Mississippi," Hayden assumes a racial perspective opposite of his own to stress the terrorizing treatment of black people historically in the south. Sylvia Plath and Robert Hayden both comment on major flaws in society; however, Plath does so through and about gender in “The Applicant” and Hayden does so through and about race in “Night, Death, Mississippi.”
In "The Applicant" by Sylvia Plath, the poem 's form and the technicalities play key roles in bringing the work to life. The poem is broken down into eight separate stanzas, with each stanza containing five lines. Although there is no specific rhyme scheme, there are internal rhymes and patterns along with a variety of questions posed within the poem. The internal rhymes include "waterproof, shatterproof, proof" in line 23, as well as

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