Saturday, August 3, 2019
Sylvia Plath :: essays papers
Sylvia Plath    Sylvia Plath is a writer whose life has generated much interest. This  may be because of her tragic, untimely death and her highly personal  writings.  Studying Sylvia^s life lets her readers understand her works  better. Many of the imagery and attitudes in her poetry are based on  her life experiences.  Throughout her short life, Sylvia Plath loved  the sea. She spent her childhood years on the Atlantic coast just north  of Boston. This setting provides a source for a lot of her poetic  ideas.  Sylvia Plath was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on October 27,  1932. Her parents were Aurelia Schober and Otto Emil Plath. Her father  was a professor of biology and German at Boston University.  He was of  German descent and had emigrated from Grabow when he was fifteen. Her  mother was a first generation American, she was born in Boston of  Austrian parents. Both of them being German indirectly lead to their  meeting in 1929. Aurelia Schober took a German class taught by Otto  Plath. She was working on a master's degree in English and German at  Boston University at the time.  Otto Plath was guided by discipline. As  his young family grew, Otto Plath's career flourished. He published the  book Bumblebees and Their Ways not long after Sylvia's birth. During  this time, his writing occupied most of his time. This excluded any  chance for a social life.  In 1936, the Plath's moved to Winthrop,  Massachusetts. Otto's health had began to fail. He diagnosed his own  illness as lung cancer and refused to see a doctor. Sylvia spent much  of her time by the ocean. She would go exploring by herself or she  would play with her younger brother, Warren because her father needed  quite. She would also visit her grandparents who lived nearby on the  ocean at Point Shirley.  Four years later Otto Plath died of diabetes  mellitus.  In 1942, the family moved away from the sea. Aurelia Plath  decided she must return to work in order to support her family. Despite  her own health problems, she began teaching nearby. In the summer of  1942, Aurelia was offered the job of designing and teaching a course at  Boston University.  She accepeted and the whole family moved.  Sylvia  Plath's eight years in Wellesley helped her grow and develop her  writing skills. Sensitive, intelligent, compelled toward perfection in  everything she attempted, she was, on the surface, a model daughter,  popular in school, earning straight A's, winning the best prizes.  Yet  her success only bred problems.  When she moved to Wellesley, she was    					    
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