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The Bell Jar Analysis

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Esther Greenwood, the protagonist of The Bell Jar by Silvia Plath, is cast under the spell of her own depression and the story of being released from the spell follows the structure of one of the 7 plot types Christopher Booker created. These 7 plot archetypes include the Quest, Voyage and Return, Comedy, Tragedy, Overcoming the Monster, Rags to Riches, and lastly the archetype of Rebirth. The novel The Bell Jar is classified as the Rebirth plot, in accordance with the 5 stages that make up said archetype: The Falling Stage, Recession Stage, Imprisonment Stage, Nightmare Stage, and The Rebirth Stage. Readers follow Esther as she pulls herself through the stages, through the falling, the rising, and the falling once more, until she reaches …show more content…

She stops writing, bathing, changing her clothes, and sleeping. This worries her mother, who sends Esther to a psychiatrist who prescribes her to shock therapy. But instead of having the shock treatment healing Esther, the doctors do the procedure improperly and terrify her, which leads her into a living hell. Now is the Nightmare Stage, the part of the story where the spell is in complete control of the protagonist and any chance of a happy ending is about as shrunken as the protagonist’s free will. Esther, through suicide, tries multiple times to rid the burden of her depression, which has controlled her after the shock treatment. She first tries to cut herself, but fails after viewing her wrist as “white and defenseless.” Esther continues by saying, “It was as if what (Esther) wanted to kill wasn’t in that skin or in the thin, blue pulse that jump under (Esther’s) thumb, but somewhere else, deeper, more secret, and a whole lot harder to get at,” (Plath 147). After her failed self-harm attempt, Esther tries harder to kill whatever was deeper inside of her. She tries hanging herself, but doesn’t bother after seeing there is no place to hang in the low-ceilinged house. Later on, Esther’s friend takes her on a double date with a boy named Cal. She asks Cal how he would kill himself and his answer disappoints her, saying that he would shoot himself. Then she challenges Cal to a swimming race in the ocean so she can drown herself. Instead of dying on her date,

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