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여성, 잡지, 전후 미국: 실비아 플라스의 『 벨 자』와 미디어 읽기Women, Magazines, and Postwar America: Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar and Readings of Mass Media

Other Titles
Women, Magazines, and Postwar America: Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar and Readings of Mass Media
Authors
오승아
Issue Date
2014
Publisher
미국소설학회
Keywords
Sylvia Plath; The Bell Jar; femininity; consumer society; mass media; postwar America; oppositional reading
Citation
미국소설, v.21, no.1, pp.49 - 84
Journal Title
미국소설
Volume
21
Number
1
Start Page
49
End Page
84
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/13808
ISSN
1738-5784
Abstract
Sylvia Plath’s only novel The Bell Jar has garnered critical attention as a quintessential American female bildungsroman especially in association with the author’s autobiographical account of her coming of age struggle. The novel goes far beyond being Plath’s personal narrative as it extensively explores the American culture of the 1950s that defined and circulated the notion of femininity prescribed by Postwar America. Considering the various forms of mass media that operate to construct society’s views on women as well as women’s view of themselves, this paper focuses on the functions of print media embedded in the world of Esther Greenwood, the novel’s protagonist. Women’s magazines are an obvious communication medium through which the principles of femininity are conveyed, and Esther’s experience as a guest intern for a New York magazine both fascinates and disillusions her in the midst of a consumer society that promotes picture-perfect and mannequin-esque portraits of women. Using the media as a mirror, Esther recognizes her desire, guilt, anxiety and the repressive mold of postwar society. Her curious relationship with the print media of magazines, newspapers, tabloids, and advertisements, functions to delineate her self-portrait as she tries to understand herself. Though she never encounters a convincing, definitive picture of herself, Esther persists as an oppositional gaze in conflict with the dictates of the omnipresent media. In relation with the author Plath’s struggle with a mass media that drew on her public images and continues to mythologize her life, the objective of this paper is to analyze The Bell Jar as a social commentary on 1950s mass media and Esther as a complicating and complicated subject in search of herself in the labyrinth of glossy images.
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