Anne Sexton Essay

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    Anne Sexton

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    Santa, the Easter Bunny and Cinderella were characters we fondly remembered. But although we recognized these figures and legends as illusions, we held on to many of the sentiments the stories, without questioning their application to adult life. Anne Sexton often uses these innocent, childlike images juxtaposed with cynical but more realistic situations in order show that the lessons society teaches children, ones that children retain as adults, are illusions that do not properly illustrate the corrupt

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    Confessional Poetry was the term given to the works of a group of American poets—including Robert Lowell, Anne Sexton, John Berryman, Sylvia Plath, W. D. Snodgrass, and less often Theodore Roethke and Allen Ginsberg—who were writing verse in the late nineteen-fifties and sixties. This label, “confessional,” was so named— misnamed—by critic M. L. Rosenthal in a 1959 review of Robert Lowell’s Life Studies, because of the personal voice and colloquial style the volume presented which was unlike the

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    ‘Starry Night’, by Anna Sexton, which was interpretation of a personal view for Van Gogh’s artwork, “Starry Night”. The prophetical nature of Anne Sexton 's spiritual poetry, Starry Night, ensues the melancholy of humanity. The poem depicts Sexton 's interpretation of the immense psychological suffering of a "religious" human being. By addressing, Van Gogh 's work caught with a deep understanding of an emptiness of the soul and also the familiar warfare of his mental distresses. Sexton showcases the shared

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    Julia Krieman Sensei Drugan ENC 1101.012 16 October 2016 “The world gives you so much pain and here you are making gold out of it.” (Kaur, 185) This excerpt from Rupi Kaur’s collection of confessional poems, Milk and Honey, shows her feelings towards poetry as an art. It explains how the confessional style of poetry allows artists to transform their pain and feelings into art. Art is always changing, new ideas are brought about, artists create with different purposes. The art of poetry is constantly

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    Anne Sexton Woman

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    I have been her kind. (Sexton, lines 1-7) Here, Sexton is not meaning that she has literally been a witch, but she empathizes with the persecuted women of earlier centuries. When Sexton states that she is “braver at night” and that she has “done her hitch/over the plain houses,” she is verbally expressing that the tenebrosity is her only escape from the judging ocular perceivers of people who lead impeccable, conventional lives in suburbia. (Sexton, lines 3-4). The orator kens what it is relish to

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    Anne Sexton The Bells

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    Anne Sexton was a troubled woman. She often felt neglected by her parents; unloved even, so much so that she attempted suicide. Before she succeeded in 1974, Sexton used hundreds of poems to confess her feelings. One such poem is “The Bells”, a seemingly simple memory of a trip to the circus. However, poetry can never be looked at through one lens. Instead, one must look deeper to understand the message the poet is attempting to convey. And so, through a different a lens, this memory becomes a story

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    Anne Sexton Cinderella

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    Anne Sexton’s archetypal poem “Cinderella”, published in 1971, examines the classic Grimm’s fairy tale. At this point in time, Disney’s Cinderella had been around for over twenty years (Sexton, Cinderella). There is a stark contrast between the two works especially in their plot, characterization, and tone. “Cinderella” the poem and Cinderella the movie tell the same general story, despite the many differences among the details in the plot. An unfortunate girl’s parents die leaving her to be

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    Essay On Anne Sexton

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    Context: Anne Sexton was an American poet born on November 9th, 1928 in Newton, Massachusetts and raised in Weston. Her family was successful economically wise and Sexton was raised in a middle-class environment; however, Sexton’s relationship with her parents were extremely strained and perhaps abusive; her father was an alcoholic. It was suggested that Sexton may have been sexually abused by her parents and felt that they were hostile to her. As such, Sexton sought refuge in her close relationship

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    Criticism Of Anne Sexton

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    Researching Anne Sexton is like untangling a giant mess of chains. Every time it seems solvable, a new chain is discovered. Every source reveals a new mystery, but nobody really knows the full story of anything in her life. She began her writing as a form of therapy to help solve her depression (Harries). She wanted to become a prostitute, but her therapist created this alternate solution (Margulies). She was described as a confessionalist poet; These poets tend to write a lot more in detail about

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    Confessional Poetry I have done it again. One year in every ten I manage it – A sort of walking miracle, my skin Bright as a Nazi lampshade, My right foot A paperweight, My face featureless, fine Jew linen. This excerpt comes from the poem “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath, one of the most famous – and infamous – poets of the 20th century. Many of Plath’s poems, such as this one, belong to a particular school of

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