Sylvia Plath
Short life. Long legacy.
- Course Length: 3 weeks
- Course Type: Short Course
- Category:
- English
- Literature
- High School
Schools and Districts: We offer customized programs that won't break the bank. Get a quote.
Are we talking suicide? Def. Most people who've heard of Sylvia Plath know two things about her:
- Sylvia Plath was a poet.
- She killed herself.
Because Plath was notoriously depressed, had complicated feelings about her deceased daddy, and ended her life when she was only thirty years old, it can be pretty hard to separate the poet from the poem. Or the Sylvia Plath from the Esther Greenwood. That's why, in this course, we'll talk biography but focus hardcore on craft.
With Common Core–aligned activities focused on expository writing and narratives, we'll
- analyze formal choices in Plath's based-on-biography novel, The Bell Jar.
- close-read poetry selections from The Colossus and Other Poems and Ariel for metaphor, simile, allusions, and more.
- read and discuss different philosophies on the complicated relationship between the speaker and the poet.
- examine how changing the structure of a text changes its meaning
Unit Breakdown
1 Sylvia Plath - Sylvia Plath
This standards-aligned short course is full of blood, phoenixes, parricide, tongues of hell, and so many bees. And that's just one book!
Sample Lesson - Introduction
Lesson 1.01: A Study in Esthers
When you read a story told in first-person, stay on guard. Why? Because the narrator has all the control and can say whatever he or she wants. Keep this in mind as we follow the trials and travails of Ms. Esther Greenwood. She can be a teensy bit unreliable at times.
Okay, okay, sometimes more than a bit.
Unreliable narrators are the spice of life, though, right? It's Esther's quirks (and her obvious character flaws) that make The Bell Jar such a memorable read. We're not saying that you have to like her. In fact, there may be parts of the story where it's nearly impossible to do so. Remember that you're catching her at a rough time in her life.
You know the old saying "it's always darkest before the dawn"? Yeah. That's about where Esther's at, so we should cut her some slack.
We're going to mention this right off the bat: Esther's life is suspiciously similar to the life and times of Sylvia Plath herself. "Write what you know" is common advice for writers, but Plath goes for it more explicitly than most in The Bell Jar.
Who were these scary-smart and sometimes-very-sad ladies? What were their lives like and why should we care? Get out your magnifying glass and Steno pads, Super Literary Sleuths. We're on the case.
Sample Lesson - Reading
Reading 1.1.01: Chapters 1 – 3 of The Bell Jar
What were we going on about in the introduction?
We know, we know. You don't know much about Sylvia Plath or Esther Greenwood yet. You're about to, though.
First, read this short biography of Sylvia Plath from the smart folks at the Poetry Foundation. This should give you a good overview of
- the major stuff that happened in Plath's life.
- the impact that stuff had on her writing.
- some of the things that critics and scholars have been saying about the woman and her writing since her death in 1963.
Then go ahead and read Chapters 1 – 3 in The Bell Jar (Modern Classics), which can decorate your bookshelf forever if you buy it. Otherwise, you can borrow it from your local public library.
These beginning chapters open with Esther trying to navigate the high society whirlwind of her internship in New York. We'll see how Esther resists this hoity-toity world but is also sometimes swept away by it. Plath lets us get to know Esther before it all goes downhill for her.
When you're done reading the chapters, check out Shmoop's chapter summaries to solidify what you just read:
This lesson's activity starts as you read, so check out Step One before you jump in.
Sample Lesson - Activity
Activity 1.01a: To Track a Protagonist: Character Journal
This is the way we track a character: like sleuths on CSI: Miami, or psychologists documenting a case study (or maybe like a student forming a thoughtful opinion—weird, we know). As you're reading, keep a Word document open on your computer (or use a paper notebook if you're old school).
Representing Information Rubric - 25 Points
Sample Lesson - Activity
- Course Length: 3 weeks
- Course Type: Short Course
- Category:
- English
- Literature
- High School
Schools and Districts: We offer customized programs that won't break the bank. Get a quote.