Female Masculinity in Sylvia Plath's Poetry
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Department of English
Abstract
The present dissertation explores female masculinity in Sylvia Plath's poetry.
As Plath is angry with patriarchy for driving women to neurosis by inflicting injustice
and exploitation on them, she attributes masculinist traits to her female speakers so as
to subvertthe patriarchal notions of looking at women.Sylvia Plath’s poems are
pregnant with the idea of liberation of women from the limited territory of patriarchal
sap. In her poetry, she poignantly expresses and exposes the age-old repression of
women and allows a gust of rebellion to avert the male domination. In the
partiarchally constructed society, most women have already internalized the
stereotypical roles that mark their own marginalization. They are pretty complacent
with their submissive roles, motherliness and domesticated, dull as well as nullified
existence. They simply comply with what patriarchy wishes them to do. This is what
Plath wants to subvert in her poetry.