Beautiful Minds: Sylvia Plath

Episode Summary

Sylvia Plath was born in 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts. From a young age, she was a talented writer, publishing her first poem at 8 years old. Tragedy struck when her father died suddenly after an operation when Sylvia was 8. His death had a major impact on her and her poetry, including her famous poem "Daddy" about her troubled relationship with her authoritarian father. After high school, Sylvia attended Smith College on a scholarship where she excelled but also began dealing with severe depression. She tried to commit suicide for the first time in 1953 when she was a guest editor at Mademoiselle Magazine in New York City. She was hospitalized and received electroshock therapy. This experience influenced her only published novel, The Bell Jar. After graduating from Smith, Sylvia won a Fulbright to study at Cambridge University in England. There she met the poet Ted Hughes, and they married after a brief courtship. For the next few years, they moved between the US and UK as Sylvia tried to balance teaching and writing. Her first poetry collection, The Colossus, was published in 1960. Sylvia and Ted had a daughter, Frida, in 1960. But Sylvia continued to struggle with depression. In 1962, after learning of Ted's affair, the couple separated. Over the next few months, Sylvia wrote prolifically, producing many of the poems that appeared in her seminal collection Ariel. Her depression worsened, and in February 1963, at age 30, she committed suicide by putting her head in the oven with the gas on. Ariel was published posthumously in 1965 and brought Sylvia great acclaim. Her confessional poetry, documenting her alienation and inner turmoil, powerfully reflected the condition of many women in postwar America. Though she found fame during her lifetime, her reputation grew even greater after her tragic early death.

Episode Show Notes

Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) was one of the most interesting and admired poets of the 20th century.

Episode Transcript

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SPEAKER_07: AT&T and Verizon lure you in with their best phone offers only to lock you into a three-year phone contract, not at T-Mobile. Now with T-Mobile's best Go 5G plans, upgrade when you want. Every year or every two, you decide. Visit T-Mobile.com to take charge of your upgrades. SPEAKER_06: Get two year financing on Go 5G Plus and Next. One year upgrade on Go 5G Next requires financing new qualifying device and upgrading in good condition after six plus months with 50% paid off. Upgrade ends financing in any promo credits. Visit T-Mobile.com. SPEAKER_01: Before we get started with today's episode, I want to let you know that our story contains mentions of suicide. Hello, from Wonder Media Network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this is Encyclopedia Wamanica. Today's beautiful mind is one of the most interesting and admired poets of the 20th century. While she achieved a level of fame during her short life, her confessional poetry, often documenting her sense of alienation and self-destruction, became increasingly popular and revered after her death. Much of her poetry came out of her own personal experiences and by extension reflected the condition of many women in post-war America. Let's talk about Sylvia Plath. SPEAKER_01: Sylvia was born on October 27th, 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts, to Otto and Aurelia Plath. From an early age, Sylvia was a devoted reader and a very talented writer. She had her first poem published when she was eight years old in the children's section of the Boston Herald newspaper. After that, Sylvia published additional poems in regional magazines and newspapers throughout her childhood. A week after Sylvia's eighth birthday, tragedy struck when her father died suddenly from complications following the amputation of his foot. His death had a major and lasting impact on Sylvia, whose poetry, particularly her famous poem called Daddy, often concerned the troubled relationship she had with her authoritarian father. Every woman adores a fascist, the boot in the face, SPEAKER_02: the brute, brute heart of a brute like you. You stand at the blackboard, Daddy, and the picture I have of you, a cleft in your chin instead of your foot. But no less a devil for that, no, not any less the black man who bit my pretty red heart in two. SPEAKER_01: After her father's death, Sylvia's mother moved the family to Wellesley, Massachusetts, so she could take a teaching job at Boston University. Of her life up until that move, Sylvia later wrote that her first nine years sealed themselves off like a ship in a bottle, beautiful, inaccessible, obsolete, a fine white flying myth. While in high school, Sylvia sold her first poem to a national publication, The Christian Science Monitor, and sold her first short story to Seventeen Magazine. In 1951, after graduating from high school, Sylvia attended Smith College on a full scholarship. She excelled there academically, artistically, and socially. But during this period, Sylvia began dealing with severe depression. She described it as if my life were magically run by two electric currents, joyous, positive, and despairing negative. Whichever is running at the moment dominates my life, floods it. During her sophomore year, Sylvia was named co-winner of the Mademoiselle Magazine fiction contest for one of her short stories. In 1953, after her junior year, she won a coveted summer job as a guest editor at Mademoiselle, for which she spent a month living in New York City. This turned out to be a tumultuous experience that coincided with the major depressive episode. In August of that summer, Sylvia tried to commit suicide by swallowing sleeping pills in her first medically documented suicide attempt. She survived the attempt, but was hospitalized and went through electroshock therapy. She would later recall the experience of her breakdown and subsequent recovery in her only published novel, The Bell Jar. After her hospitalization, Sylvia returned to Smith to receive her degree with highest honors. She subsequently won a Fulbright Fellowship to study at Cambridge University in England, where she continued her writing. In 1956, while at Cambridge, Sylvia met poet Ted Hughes, and after a whirlwind romance, the two married months later. Hughes was already a well-known and celebrated poet at the time, and Sylvia admired his work. In 1957, Sylvia and Ted moved to the US, where Sylvia took up a teaching position at her alma mater, Smith College. Sylvia found it hard to teach and write at the same time, so the couple moved to Boston in 1958, where Sylvia worked as a receptionist. At night, Sylvia attended creative writing seminars given by the famous poet Robert Lowell. The poet Anne Sexton was one of her classmates. Both Lowell and Sexton encouraged Sylvia to spend more of her time writing from her own experiences. At the end of 1959, Sylvia and Ted moved back to London, and in April of 1960, their daughter, Frida, was born. In October of 1960, Sylvia published her first collection of poetry, The Colossus. Most of the poems in The Colossus had already been printed in major publications like Harper's and The New Yorker, but the collection was met with general acclaim from the literary world. Sylvia continued to struggle with depression throughout this period. In June of 1962, she ran her car off of the road and into a lake in what she described afterwards as a suicide attempt. She found out a month later that her husband was having a long-term affair, after which Sylvia and Ted separated. Starting in October 1962, Sylvia began writing new poems at an extraordinary rate, at least 26 of the poems written during this now-famous six-month creative period were included in her masterwork collection of poetry called Ariel. In the early months of 1963, Sylvia's depression worsened, and she began to see a new psychiatrist who put her on an MAOI inhibitor and arranged for a live-in nurse. When the nurse arrived on the morning of February 11th, 1963, she couldn't get into Sylvia's flat. After breaking in with the help of a local workman, the two found Sylvia in the kitchen with her head in the oven, dead of carbon monoxide poisoning. She'd sealed off the kitchen from her sleeping children with towels, cloths, and tape. She was just 30 years old. Ariel, the collection of poems that Sylvia furiously wrote during the last months of her life, was published posthumously in 1965 and brought Sylvia to greater fame than she ever achieved during her lifetime. The first stanza of Sylvia's poem called Tulips, which appears in Ariel, reads. SPEAKER_03: The tulips are too excitable. It is winter here. Look how white everything is. How quiet, how snowed in. I am learning peacefulness, lying by myself quietly, as the light lies on these white walls, this bed, these hands. SPEAKER_03: I am nobody. I have nothing to do with explosions. I have given my name and my day clothes up to the nurses and my history to the anesthetist and my body to surgeons. SPEAKER_01: Tune in tomorrow for the story of Another Beautiful Mind. This week of Encyclopedia Womanica is brought to you by Audible. Right now, for a limited time, you can get three months of Audible for just $6.95 a month. That's more than half off the regular price. Just go to audible.com slash encyclopedia. That's a-u-d-i-b-l-e dot com slash encyclopedia, or text encyclopedia to 500-500. If you're interested in more of Sylvia Plath's work, I highly recommend listening to The Bell Jar, narrated by Maggie Gyllenhaal, on Audible. Again, right now, for a limited time, you can get three months of Audible for just $6.95 a month. Go to audible.com slash encyclopedia, or text encyclopedia to 500-500. Special thanks to Liz Kaplan, my favorite sister and co-creator. Talk to you tomorrow. SPEAKER_07: AT&T and Verizon lure you in with their best phone offers, only to lock you into a three-year phone contract, not at T-Mobile. Now, with T-Mobile's best Go 5G plans, upgrade when you want, every year or every two, you decide. Visit T-Mobile.com to take charge of your upgrades. SPEAKER_06: Get two-year financing on Go 5G Plus and Next. 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