Hi Mrs. Clifford I’m like the busiest person on the planet
right now so I’m kind of planning to just let my thoughts stream through on
this one. Sorry if its awful.
What
themes do you see in the Bell Jar? Give evidence from the poems. Does the
poetry deal with themes related to love, death, war, or peace? What other
themes show up in the poems? Are there particular historical events that are
mentioned in the poems? What are the most important concepts that are addressed
in the poems?
The Bell Jar deals with themes like mental illness and
pressure to conform in society.
The first lines of this story
reference a historical event and offers some foreshadowing about her mental
illness, “It was a queer, sultry summer, the summer they electrocuted the Rosenberges,
and I didn’t know what I was doing in New York. I’m stupid about executions. The idea of being electrocuted makes me sick, and that’s all
there was to read about in the papers… It had nothing to do with me, but I
couldn’t help wondering what it would be like, being burned alive all along
your nerves. I thought it must be
the worst thing in the world.” This
historical reference places the story in the 1950s when the Rosenberges were
convicted of espionage for passing information of the atomic bomb to the Soviet
Union. The bit on imagining
electrocution doesn’t hit you until you have read the rest of the book but it
does provide foreshadowing of the multiple electroshock treatments she receives for her depression and their traumatic nature.
Ester spends a lot of time worrying
about what she will do with her life.
She feels pressure to become a housewife, to get married and have kids,
but she also wants to peruse her career as a writer and poet. Another societal norm she confronts is
the loss of virginity to become a woman.
She thinks that having sex will have a major impact on her and allow her
to really begin her life. She sees
that women are expected to stay celibate until marriage but is angered that men
are not held to the same standard.
When she finds out that her old boyfriend was involved with a woman he
worked with while they were dating she knows that she cannot marry him. Her desire to lose her virginity leads
her into many dangerous situations and to the spilling of blood several times. She finally chooses to seduce a math
professor when she sees his elaborate library and study, but when they engage
in the act she has built up in her mind she is sent to the hospital with
uncontrollable bleeding. Blood is
almost always a sign of transition in this novel.
There are some really horrific scenes
that deal with motherhood that I would love to write about but I don’t have the
book in front of me because my mom is downstairs reading it right now. She almost never reads so I can’t bring
myself to take it from her.
Thanks for sharing an information post with us, its really helpful for student.
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