PublishedOxford University Press, August 2024 |
ISBN9780198841470 |
FormatSoftcover, 144 pages |
Dimensions17.4cm × 11cm × 0.7cm |
Sylvia Plath is one of the most influential and iconic American writers of the twentieth century, popular with academic and general audiences alike. Plath, who died at age 30, left behind a body of work that changed the direction of modern poetry, and buttressed second-wave feminism. Her poetry and fiction have been especially important to generations of women readers who have found a powerful reflection of their own emotions and experiences in Plath's art.
In this incisive introduction, leading Plath scholar Heather Clark explores the intersections between Plath's life and work while discussing key themes in Plath's poetry collections The
Colossus and Ariel, her novel The Bell Jar, and short stories