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The Bell Jar Sylvia Plath

Decent Essays

Compare and Contrast: “The Bell Jar” and “Daddy”

Literature and art, in general, can convey very strong, powerful feelings and provide emotional relief for the artist. Although Sylvia Plath likely meant for her works to be interpreted as simple fiction they are littered with autobiographical details. The characters are not meant to be herself, still, what she writes about the mental condition and feelings of the narrators are proven to be her personal thoughts, evidenced by the events of her life, namely her depression and suicide. Through her poems, in this case her poem titled “Daddy”, and her only novel, “The Bell Jar”, we can have a vivid, personal retelling of the issues she faced throughout her life such as the loss of her father, feelings of …show more content…

In the novel, Esther feels like a bell jar separates and distorts her perspective of the world and the people she knows. The bell jar is used as a symbol for her worsening depression, which eventually turns into madness. At the end of the novel Esther overcomes her problems and the bell jar lifts, although it may drop again. In the case of the poem’s narrator, she says she feels like a Jew as she is so estranged and scared by the appearance of her father, who she refers to as a “panzer-man” with Aryan features. This refers to a father of German origin, same as Plath’s father. The poem’s narrator seems to also have Jewish descent, with which she identifies, rather than that of his German father. She later compares him to figures of tyranny because she feels abandoned by her dad, and possibly blames him for her depression and attempt at suicide. The poem’s narrator never seems to overcome her feelings of solitude and tries to simply stop thinking about her problems. Furthermore, her identifying with a Jew could be interpreted her as sympathizing with the Holocaust’s victims, as she was also a victim

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