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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

A performance do suic?dio em Ariel, de Sylvia Plath

Tavares J?nior, Jos? Mariano 23 September 2011 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-17T15:06:53Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 JoseMTJR_DISSERT.pdf: 1250053 bytes, checksum: 1c2730a4bd584ab86c235050f38b5f11 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011-09-23 / This dissertation aims at investigating the book Ariel (1965), written by Sylvia Plath, as a kind of performative and ritual poetry that fragments and reconstructs the personal experience, manipulating the memory of the autobiographical body as a way to rehearse and restore subjectivity. We propose that, in Ariel, the hyperbolic, transcendent and parodic transfiguration of real episodes, used as literary substance, corrupts and subverts the specular idea of a confessional truth usually related to the writer s work. Our objective is to examine signs of confluence between Sylvia Plath s poetry and performance art, departing from de idea that the spectacularization of the self, the exhibition of private rituals, the theatricalization of autobiographical circumstances and the undressing of one s craziness and vulnerability are mutual procedures to the poet and the perfomer. Simultaneously unfolding between the inside and the outside of the poem, Sylvia Plath s real suicide and the death and rebirth rituals performed in the literary text appear as symbolic elements that might reveal the performer s liminal space, where reality and representation coexist, and where the performative testimony does not frame only the real subject s body but also his/her infinite possibilities of being restored through art. / Esta disserta??o prop?e investigar a escritura do livro Ariel (1965), de Sylvia Plath, como um tipo de poesia perform?tica e ritual que fragmenta e reconstr?i a experi?ncia privada, manipulando a mem?ria do corpo autobiogr?fico como forma de ensaiar e restaurar a subjetividade. Nossa proposta assume que, em Ariel, a transfigura??o hiperb?lica, par?dica e transcendente de epis?dios reais, utilizados como mat?ria liter?ria, subverte e corrompe a id?ia especular de uma verdade confessional habitualmente relacionada ? obra da escritora. Nosso objetivo ? examinar pontos de conflu?ncia entre a poesia de Sylvia Plath e a performance art, partindo da id?ia de que espetaculariza??o do self, a exibi??o de rituais ?ntimos, a teatraliza??o de circunst?ncias autobiogr?ficas e o desnudamento da loucura e da vulnerabilidade do sujeito, s?o procedimentos comuns ? poeta e ao performer. Desdobrando-se simultaneamente entre o dentro e o fora do poema, o suic?dio real da poeta e os ritos de morte e ressurrei??o performados no texto liter?rio afiguram-se como elementos simb?licos capazes de revelar o espa?o liminar do performer, onde o real e a representa??o coexistem, e onde o testemunho perform?tico n?o emoldura apenas o corpo real do sujeito mas suas infinitas possibilidades de restaura??o atrav?s da arte.
22

Écrire le désenchantement : opacité et transparence dans l’œuvre des poètes « confessionnelles » Anne Sexton et Sylvia Plath / Writing Disenchantment : opacity and Transparency in the Literary Works of the “Confessional” Poets Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath

Thomine, Angélique 24 November 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse de doctorat a pour but d’analyser l’œuvre des poètes américaines Anne Sexton et Sylvia Plath à l’aune des études féminines et de genre en s’attachant à la question du mythe et du désenchantement. Plath et Sexton ont été étiquetées « poètes confessionnelles » ; il s’agit dans un premier temps de comprendre les mécanismes sur lesquels repose cette appellation qui participe de la construction de mythes autour des deux poètes et de les déconstruire. Plath et Sexton se sont connues à la fin des années 50, s’influençant l’une l’autre. Elles ont en commun une poétique du désenchantement, de leurs poèmes « confessionnels » à leurs réécritures de contes de fées et de mythes que l’on peut qualifier d’ « anti-contes ». Si leur style poétique diffère, les thèmes qu’elles abordent se répondent en écho, du trauma incestueux au corps féminin, de la femme au foyer à la représentation dichotomique de « la femme » en Madone et putain. Nous abordons ces sujets dans un deuxième temps en les reliant aux notions de voile et de pudeur. L’injonction à la pudeur provient en partie de la scène poétique bostonienne des années 50 à 70, de l’influence puritaine du poète Robert Lowell et des critiques misogynes. Cette étude s’applique dans un troisième temps à relier littérature et société en mettant en lumière l’influence du contexte patriarcal et poétriarcal sur et dans l’œuvre de Plath et de Sexton. / This Ph.D. thesis analyzes the literary works of American poets Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath in light of Women’s and Gender Studies and considers the notions of myth and disenchantment. Plath and Sexton were labeled “confessional” poets; this study’s first section seeks to understand the underlying mechanisms of this appellation and how it participated in the construction of myths around the two poets and also aims to deconstruct these myths. Plath and Sexton met at the end of the ‘50s and influenced each other. Their poetics of disenchantment are a common trait in their literary works, from their “confessional” poems to their rewriting of fairy tales and myths which may be called “anti-tales.” Although their poetic styles differ, the themes they pursue are similar, from the incestuous trauma to the female body, from the American housewife to the representation of women through the Madonna/slut dichotomy. In this thesis’s second section, these topics are scrutinized and considered in relation to the notions of veil and modesty. Appeals for modesty stem in part from the Bostonian poetic stage of the 50s-70s, the puritan influence of New England poet Robert Lowell and the misogynistic critics of the time. This study’s third section links literature and society and emphasizes the influence of patriarchal and “poetriarchal” context on and in Plath’s and Sexton’s poetry and prose.
23

Marées d'Iris, roman par tableaux, suivi de La dérobade comme mouvement d'écriture chez Marina Tsvetaeva et Sylvia Plath

Leduc, Billie-Anne January 2017 (has links)
Ce mémoire comporte deux grands axes en rapport avec le motif de la dérobade. Il s’agit d’étudier ce mouvement dans le texte, qui signale un retrait, une protection, ou une autre forme d’action dans mon écriture et chez deux auteures du XXe siècle, Marina Tsvetaeva (1892-1941) et Sylvia Plath (1932-1963). Dans la première partie de ce mémoire, je présente le fruit de ma création intitulé Marées d’Iris, un roman par tableaux qui regroupe récits, dessins et poèmes. Iris, la protagoniste qui parle au « je », est en proie à un étouffement quotidien. Ce roman par tableaux cherche à figurer ses dérobades à différents moments de sa vie. La partie réflexive de ce mémoire s’offre comme une analyse comparée des mouvements de dérobade dans l’écriture de Marina Tsvetaeva et Sylvia Plath. Y seront abordés les écrits intimes Vivre dans le feu : confessions, publié en 2005 aux éditions Robert Laffont, et Journaux 1950-1962, publié en 1999 chez Gallimard. Les mouvements de la dérobade seront appréhendés à partir d’analyses thématiques et formelles, suivant l’hypothèse que la dérobade sert d’exutoire à l’étouffement, en plus d’offrir une solution aux angoisses identitaires et amoureuses. Deux récits serviront ensuite à l’exploration des traits de la dérobade dans l’écriture fictionnelle, afin de déterminer leur incidence sur Ma mère et la musique de Marina Tsvetaeva, recueil publié en 1979 aux éditions l’Âge d’Homme, et La cloche de détresse de Sylvia Plath, roman publié en 1972 chez Gallimard.
24

Critiquing Academic Culture with Satire through Lady Lazarus, A Fictional Biography

Perry, Amber R 06 August 2013 (has links)
In the tradition of academic satire, Lady Lazarus is the fictional biography of the daughter of American rock musicians. In her late teens she rises to fame as confessional poet, who, despite only publishing one collection of poems during her brief life, becomes an overnight sensation. Author Andrew Altschul is satirizing academia’s need to be a part of popular culture and in doing so, privileges the ability to use controversy and conventional beauty to sell books as opposed to creating quality art. By focusing on how the author uses Hans Robert Jauss’ horizons of expectations, unreliable narrators, anecdotes in biography and the economics of fame as a deciding factor in academia, the author has created a dense and punitive opinion of academia’s inclusion of popular culture into its world.
25

Unearthing Real Women: Reclaiming Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf from Their Suicide Narratives

Dunn, Jessica 13 May 2016 (has links)
Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath are two well-known women writers of the twentieth century who committed suicide. The narratives created by their deaths have in some instances become as important as the canonical work they produced. In an effort to understand their motivations and struggles, critics and the public alike have sometimes reduced these women to victims of the patriarchy, mental illness, or even themselves. Beginning with my own discovery of this issue in the legacies of Plath and Woolf combined with my personal dealings with suicide in my family, I recount how I lost these two women as exemplary figures because of their choice to commit suicide. I then take a look at what others have said about their deaths and how it has affected their legacies as writers. Finally, I take a look at Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and Plath’s The Bell Jar for an alternate perspective on suicide. Through this journey, I recount how I have been able to regain my respect for these two talented women by considering multiple viewpoints and acknowledging the nuance inherent in any account.
26

Power play in The Bell Jar and "The Yellow Wallpaper" : How power play is manifested towards the protagonists in The Bell Jar and "The Yellow Wallpaper"

Vujovic, Ana January 2011 (has links)
Abstract This paper will attempt to analyze how similar forms of power play are manifested towards the protagonists in both The Bell Jar and “The Yellow Wallpaper”. The aim of the essay is to investigate how power play affects the protagonists’ relations with their caregivers and how it affects their treatments. Thus, the hypothesis is that it is the power play that prevents the protagonists in “The Yellow Wallpaper” and The Bell Jar from recovering from their mental illness, which is confirmed by my analysis. Therefore, the concept of power play will be used in the essay as an instrument of analysis. The hypothesis will be discussed from five main points: obstacles to recovery, caregivers’ role in recovery, patients’ response to treatment, the role of power play, and the negative impact which power play has on recovery. Keywords: Power play, mental illness, treatment, recovery, patient-caregiver relationship, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Sylvia Plath, Reet Sjögren.
27

"I talk to God but the sky is empty" W.B. Yeats's influence on Sylvia Plath's renunciation of Christianity /

Anderson, Rachel Leigh. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2009. / Additional advisors: Sue Kim, Christopher Metress, Kieran Quinlan. Description based on contents viewed June 4, 2009; title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 87-91).
28

Odpoutání Prométhei: L'Écriture féminine ve vybrané poezii Sylvie Plathové / Unbinding the Female Prometheus: L'Écriture féminine in Selected Poetry of Sylvia Plath

Piňosová, Michaela January 2017 (has links)
The definition of one's femininity and its reflection in poetic language are two recurring issues examined by contemporary feminist critics. In their works, they consistently challenge the opinion that true poetry is essentially masculine, and that a woman poet is inevitably an inferior poet. Sylvia Plath, whose poetry represents the central subject of this thesis, could hardly be considered an inferior poet. Despite her early death, Plath's poetry continues to be immensely influential, and it tends to be adopted as an example by feminist critics who attempt to define the branch American women's poetry, reaching back to poets such as Anne Bradstreet and Emily Dickinson. From their point of view, Plath's works illustrate the fact that women's poetry has not only its history, but also its language. One may thus discover interesting parallels between the French-based concept of l'écriture féminine and Plath's poetic language. For the representatives of the l'écriture féminine movement Hélène Cixous, Luce Irigaray and Julia Kristeva, Western discourse is phallogocentric, i.e. based on the centrality of the phallus as a primary signifier. To disrupt the traditional (masculine) discourse, they neither propose a total split between the "male" and the "female" signifiers nor do they encourage women to...
29

No Need for Penis-Envy : A Feminist Psychoanalytic Reading of The Bell Jar

Erikson, Kajsa January 2021 (has links)
This essay analyzes Esther Greenwood’s identity crisis, mental illness, and recovery in Sylvia Plath’s novel The Bell Jar (1963) from a feminist psychoanalytic perspective. The purpose is to understand the cultural and psychological mechanisms behind the main character’s situation. Esther is a talented and hardworking student who dreams of a literary career in 1950’s America. At the age of nineteen, events and realizations launch Esther into an identity crisis that leads to severe depression. Why she falls ill, and the nature of her illness and recovery, are up for interpretation. The thesis of this essay is that Esther Greenwood’s identity crisis, mental illness, and recovery can be explained using a feminist interpretation of Freud’s theories of hysteria and melancholia, and the development of the differences between the sexes, which includes the Freudian concepts of castration, bisexuality, and the Oedipus complex.
30

'No Home Here': Female Space and the Modernist Aesthetic in Nella Larsen's Quicksand and Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar

Cherinka, Julianna N 01 January 2018 (has links)
In her 1929 essay "A Room of One's Own," Virginia Woolf famously asserts that "a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction" (4). This concept places an immediate importance on the role of the Modernist female subject as an artist and as an architect, constructing the places and spaces that she exists within. With Woolf's argument as its point of departure, this thesis investigates the theme of female space in two Modernist texts: Nella Larsen's Quicksand (1928) and Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar (1963). The respective protagonists of Quicksand and The Bell Jar, Helga Crane and Esther Greenwood, each undertake journeys to obtain spaces that are purely their own. However, this thesis positions each space that Helga and Esther occupy as both male-constructed and male-dominated in order to address the inherent gendering of space and its impact on the development of feminine identities. This thesis focuses specifically on the roles of the mother, the muse, and the female mentor, tracking the spaces in which Helga and Esther begin to adhere to these roles. Expanding on Lauren Berlant's theory of cruel optimism, this thesis will use the term "cruel femininity" to support its intervening claim that the respective relationships that Helga and Esther each have with their own feminine identities begin to turn cruel as they internalize the male-dominated spatial structures surrounding them. Overall, this thesis argues that there is no space in existence where Helga and Esther can realize their full potential as human beings, as long as the spatial structures within their communities continue to be controlled by hegemonic, patriarchal beliefs.

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