Dear Still, old friend:
I'm not certain which remark of mine you might be referring to about Sylvia Plath, but if I hinted she was "irrelevant" ( as a poet), I should be clubbed for it.
What I probably said, and say often, is that the soap opera of Sylvia Plath's life, as opposed to her art, is irrelevant.
As an artist, she was strong, careful and imaginative-- sharp-tongued and meant to be that way-- effective.
The "irrelevant soap opera" aspect of Anne Sexton ( another very strong poet) and Sylvia Plath and their suicides gets in the way of seeing their poetry.
Elizabeth Bishop and Louise Bogan, their slightly ( but very slightly) earlier contemporaries, are poets I often point to whose powerful and brilliant work is not obscured by their recurrent depressions and alcoholism. But I could name many more female poets whose lives would not make "dramatic" movies with "moving" scenes, but nevertheless are first-rate artists.
I have mentioned Marianne Moore. I could mention Adrienne Rich, Muriel Rukeyser, Amy Clampitt, Jane Kenyon, Shirley Kauffman-- I could go on and on.
It's the poetry, not the life, which ought to be the primary focus.
Hart Crane was a forlorn, love-torn homosexual with impossible longings who floated in alcohol until he sank in the Gulf of Mexico, commiting suicide by drowning .
But he was a great poet, his lines still seem original ninety years after he wrote them, and the art comes first, that's all.
There's a new book out on Whitman's alleged "homosexuality", but it's the brilliant parts of "Leaves of Grass" and WW's best prose work that really matter.
Peace,
Zlatko
Google Answer? – Fahgettabout it!
- Zlatko Waterman
- Posts: 1631
- Joined: August 19th, 2004, 8:30 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA USA
- Contact:
- stilltrucking
- Posts: 20646
- Joined: October 24th, 2004, 12:29 pm
- Location: Oz or somepLace like Kansas
Dang me kind Professor
they ought to take a rope and hang me
I suppose I have twisted your words again what you said was
Like saying too much Mozart
got to go talk at you later
dam I really hate when I get sloppy with my scholarship
sincere appologies for mis quoting you again
late for work again edit later please excuse typos
they ought to take a rope and hang me
I suppose I have twisted your words again what you said was
To me that is an oxymoronWe just hear too much of Anne Sexton, Sylvia, and Virginia ( Woolf).
Like saying too much Mozart
As far as the Plath movie, I have not seen it, do not plan to read it. Frieda Hughes comment about it being part of The Sylvia Plath Suicide Doll industry about sums it up I think. The Bell Jar and When Jesus Suckled came along at traumatic moments in my life. If they did not save my life they at least saved my sanity. When I first started to post to litkicks summer of love I had the absurd idea for a romance story between Ester Greenwood and Sal Paradise.But I could name many more female poets whose lives would not make "dramatic" movies with "moving" scenes, but nevertheless are first-rate artists.
got to go talk at you later
dam I really hate when I get sloppy with my scholarship
sincere appologies for mis quoting you again
late for work again edit later please excuse typos
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest