Реферат: Examine Plaths Presentation Of Parentchild Relationships Essay
Название: Examine Plaths Presentation Of Parentchild Relationships Essay Раздел: Топики по английскому языку Тип: реферат |
Examine Plath?s Presentation Of Parent-child Relationships Essay, Research Paper Plath deals with the themes she chooses to write about, such as death, suicide and depression, in a very interesting fashion. However, out of all her themes, the one that is the most interesting is her presentation of relationships between parents and children. The way in which she deals with this theme is very different to her other poetry. She breaks many of the rules that were laid down by poets before her, such as the romantics. These series of poets stressed the idea of family and the importance of parents to children and vice versa. As a result, the vast majority of poets that wrote about these relationships thereafter presented them in a very idealistic manner, implying family harmony and lack of conflict. Therefore, when Plath started to write about family relationships in a decidedly unromantic and disturbing style, some were shocked. Instead of her poems being about the healthiness of relationships between parents and children, they are about the darker, less talked about side. It is mainly due to this difference between her and some previous presentations of parent-child relationships that makes her poetry tackling the subject interesting.? As with most of Plath?s other material, her method of dealing with this theme is by no means straightforward. This is shown in the fact that there are two types of parent-child relationships presented in her poetry. The first relationship is written with the speaker as a progeny? discussing her own parents, and the second explores the relationship between the speaker and her own children. Generally this speaker is Plath discussing her own relationships. We know this due to the amount of autobiographical material we have of Plath?s life present in such texts as her novel, ?The Bell Jar?, the many interviews she did and the letters that have been published since her death. The way in which she presents these two different kinds of relationships contrast widely in tone, imagery and language.? When Plath is writing about her own parents and her relationship with them the tone of the writing is very dark, depressing and full of anger. Possibly the most interesting poem tackling this matter is ?Daddy? which she wrote in 1962. In this poem Plath lays bare the tortured relationship between her and her father. She talks of having to live in a ?black shoe? for thirty years, cowering, ?poor and white/Barely daring to breathe or Achoo.? By describing herself as ?poor and white?, she creates a stark contrast to the ?black shoe?. It is as if she has been stifled, starved of nutrition and sunlight by her all enveloping father. She is ?poor?, not in the sense of material value, but spiritually. She has had all feeling and emotion sapped from her by the presence of her father. ?The strange childhood imagery in the echo of the well-known nursery rhyme (?The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe?) is carried on throughout the rest of the poem. For example the repetitions (?You do not do, you do not do?) and the rigid assonances (?Barely daring?) sound like another nursery rhyme, albeit a rather twisted one. This kind of imagery suggests that she is in some way rooted in her childhood past. We then learn that this is due to the overbearing influence her ?Daddy? had, and still has, on her. He is described as huge, ?marble heavy?, even his toe is as ?Big as a Frisco seal?. This imagery would suggest that her father represented to her a big and rather threatening presence. This is backed up by Plath?s comparison of her father to a Nazi oppressor, ?With your Luftwaffe??, ?And your Aryan eye, bright blue./Panzer man, panzer man, O you? This is interesting as we know that her father, although Austrian was not actually a Nazi, so even a tenuous racial link is enough to cast him as a Nazi murderer in her eyes. To her, he is obviously so close to a Nazi in his actions, that she sees him as one. She then casts herself as the oppressed Jew being ?chuffed off?to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen. Her usage of ?chuffed? obviously refers to the Nazi?s transport of the Jews to the death camps by train, but it also harks back to the childhood imagery, in that it is a very childish word with associations childhood games. Despite all this anger, Plath still voices a wish to rejoin him. She was ?ten when they buried (him)?, and mentions that ?at twenty (she) tried to die/ To get back, back, back to (him)?. This shows that although her father was an overbearing, dominant, almost stifling presence in her life, he was also a very important one. Even in death he retains his power over her life and the only way in which she can escape him is to die and join him. The poem ends with threats of another suicide attempt. She cuts herself off so she can be left alone to die. The last line of the poem; ?Daddy, daddy, you bastard, I?m through?, is a kind of severance from a turbulent love affair. Such reference to her father appears in Plath?s other work, such as ?Little Fugue?. In this case the poem is not exclusively about her father, but does contain references which back up the ideas in ?Daddy?. For example, Plath?s use of threatening language when describing her father: ?Such a dark funnel, my father!?. She again describes him as Nazi figure; ?Gothic and barbarous, pure German.? Although not such a prominent figure in her work, Plath does mention her mother in some of her poems. The best example of this is in ?The Moon and the Yew Tree?. In this poem we see her mother as presented in a guise of being out of reach and distant. ??????????? The eyes lift after it and find the moon./ The moon is my mother?. ??????????? How I would like to believe in tenderness. It is as if she is reaching towards her mother as a Yew tree reaches towards the sky and the moon, forever out of reach. Her mother smiles benevolently down upon her but does nothing, has no effect on the shadow of her father, the imposing presence of the ?Gothic? tree. In this way she feels neglected by her mother, and as a result she is not such a dominant presence, and so does not figure in as much work as Plath?s father. However, the dominant tone of Plath?s poems tackling the matter of the narrator as the ?child? talking about her own relationship with her parents is a dark one. This has much to do with her own experiences. The language used in these poems is abrasive and violent and this used in conjunction with the threatening and somewhat disturbing imagery produces poetry of immense power and feeling. ??????????? There exists another way in which Plath writes about parent-child relationships. That is of the narrator talking of her own children and her relationship with them. These poems contrast wildly in tone and style to her other poems such as the ones discussed above. Instead of being dark, somewhat depressing and disturbing in tone, they are more light-hearted and joyful. In fact, it could be said that when Plath writes about a parent-child relationship from this point of view, it is the only time she really allows her poems to have a lighter tone. These seem to be her most uplifting poems, in theme, tone and language. One of her happiest poems tackling this subject is ?You?re?. This is about the relationship between a mother and her unborn child. Its overall tone is very light-hearted and joyful, with Plath describing the life inside her using playful imagery and uplifting language. ?Clownlike, happiest on your hands? is a good example of the overall tone and style of the poem. It is exuberant and high spirited and is in stark contrast to many of her other poems. It is clear that her child has already given her a lot of pleasure. Indeed she is very satisfied, ?Right, like a well done sum?. At last she feels complete and has feeling of existing, of being alive. Plath also uses a number of almost absurd comparisons in this poem which add to the happy tone. For example, the line ?Mute as a turnip? is humorous and adds to the feeling of merriment. The rhythm and metre of ?You?re? is also very different to her poems about child-parent relationships, with her as the child. It is written more like a narrative, or story than ?Daddy? which has regular, almost marching rhythm and rhyme. ??????????? ?Morning Song? is similar to ?You?re?, in that it is of much lighter tone. It too uses uplifting imagery and language to present a relationship, indicating that it makes Plath happy. A good example is the first line; ?Love set you going like a fat gold watch?. This is a very stimulating choice of imagery as it has so many implications. The ?fat gold watch? signifies tangibility and? weightiness. It has associations with the inexorability of life; it will tick onwards until it finally winds down and stops. She is satisfied at her creation, it makes her feel as if she has accomplished something worthwhile. This light tone is consistent throughout the poem and is epitomised in the last line: ?The clear vowels rise like balloons?. This echoes the lifting of her soul which having a child brings her. She enjoys looking after her child and ?stumbl(ing) from bed, cow heavy and floral/ In (her) Victorian nightgown.? This is typical of the self mocking style of Plath. So rarely in her poetry does Plath write about things giving her pleasure, that when she does, as is the case in these poems about her relationship with her children, it stands out as being remarkable. ??????????? However, this is not always the case in Plath?s work. Nothing is ever straightforward and simple with her, and one must avoid making generalisations. Indeed, not all of Plath?s poems in which children appear are lighthearted and uplifting. In fact, in many of her poems, she uses child, more often baby, imagery to produce a threatening tone. A good example of this appears in her poem ?Tulips?, where she talks of the tulips which ??breathe lightly/ Through their white swaddlings, like an awful baby?. This is not the only example of nightmarish and somewhat disturbing child imagery. For example, the line in ?The Arrival of the Bee Box?, ?The coffin of? a square baby?. These kinds of references to children in Plath?s other work, although not directly tackling the matter of parent-child relationships, indicate that there was another darker side to Plath?s relationship with her children. She felt threatened by their demand for attention and they obviously represented some kind of malevolent influence on her. Perhaps one can read this as Plath?s desire not to treat her children as her parents treated her. It is as though her fear of this comes out in her disturbing baby imagery as she is frightened by the responsibility she is under due to them. ??????????? In conclusion, it can be said that Plath?s presentation of parent-child relationships is full of conflicting emotions and different viewpoints. One cannot make a rule into which all her poetry fits because they are all so varied and conflicting. However, if one takes the two types of parent child poetry discussed separately, one can divide them into two general types.The first, which tackles Plath?s relationship with her own parents all seem to be dark and malevolent and full of anger. The second type seem to be far more lighthearted, indeed by far the most lighthearted of all Plath?s work. Despite the existence of a darker, more threatening side to her presentation of this kind of relationship it does not quite counterbalance the overall impression of happiness present in her poems of this kind. |