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실비아 플라스의 유산: 사생활과 폭로의 정치The Legacy of Sylvia Plath: The Politics of Privacy and Exposure

Other Titles
The Legacy of Sylvia Plath: The Politics of Privacy and Exposure
Authors
박주영
Issue Date
2020
Publisher
한국영미문학페미니즘학회
Keywords
Birthday Letters; privacy; exposure; the legacy of Sylvia Plath; the problems of publicity
Citation
영미문학페미니즘, v.28, no.3, pp.33 - 67
Journal Title
영미문학페미니즘
Volume
28
Number
3
Start Page
33
End Page
67
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/3314
ISSN
1226-9689
Abstract
This essay aims to explore how Birthday Letters exploits and abuses Sylvia Plath’s stunning poems in order to undermine her literary authority. This essay argues that Ted Hughes’s poetry consistently attempts to stand guard over the privacy of Plath’s death, exposing his hatred of Plath’s critics and readers. Focused on Hughes’s private memories of his life with Plath, Birthday Letters could be read as a public response to arguments over the politics of publication, representation, and poetic authority. Ghosts of many other Plath’s poems frequently haunt Birthday Letters; this poem also indicates a response to the problems of publicity. Furthermore, this essay examines the familiar but misrepresented aspects of the controversies surrounding Plath and Hughes. Since her untimely death, Plath’s public status has remained heavily contested. Many critics who write about Plath do so not in order to assert her literary authority, but to retract what they suggest is a public standing artificially inflated by the details of her personal life. Male critics and the Plath Estate seek to commodify Plath’s mental health as a way of removing her authority to tell her own story. On the contrary, feminist literary critics make claims for Plath’s poetry and life as an icon of feminism. Feminists accuse Hughes of silencing Plath with concomitant charges of censorship. Ultimately, Hughes’s continuing contest with Plath over the ownership of his life is not a contest with Plath, but with her readers’ interpretations of her words.
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