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Peopleâs lives are shaped by their success and failures in their personal lives, and relationships with each other. The author, Sylvia Plath, expresses this in her novel, "The Bell Jar." She is concerned almost entirely with the education and maturation of Esther Greenwood, the main character of the novel. Plathâs novel uses a chronological and necessary periodic structure to keep Esther at the center of all action. Other characters are imperfect and secondary to Esther, and her developing character. They are shown only through their effects on her as a central character.
Sylvia Plath sets impossibly high goals for herself. âI want, I think, to be omniscient,â she wrote. âI think I would like to call myself âthe girl who wanted to be God.â Yet if I were not in this body, where would I be-perhaps I am designed to be classified and qualified. But, oh, I cry out against itâ(King 16). She expressed these feelings at the age of seventeen; surely many naĂŻve, intelligent seventeen year olds have expressed similar sentiment. But in Sylvia Plath they signal the perfectionist attitude that drove her to succeed. This attitude insured failure, breeding a kind o destructive energy, which was to become increasingly evident in her writing of the character, Esther Greenwood. Esther Greenwood is a parallel to Sylvia Plath, thus enabling the reader to understand both the character and the author in a humane way. The reader tends to sympathize with Esther. We all at one time have felt that we just did not quite fit in. Esther tries to adjust herself to those that surround her by taking in the different personalities, trying to find the right one, that could be hers. If we allow those that surround us to decide who we are we lose the power to define, t judge, and to respect ourselves. Esther is a young woman who has plunged into depression, which has caused her to doubt herself and the world around her. She attempts suicide and is put in a mental facility. The novel is more than a story of attempted suicide. It is a novel that inspires renovation and originality in mind and spirit. In Sylvia Plathâs, "The Bell Jar," Esther Greenwoodâs inability to cope with daily life and social pressures bring her down into an inescapable word of profound depression. Estherâs desire to be someone else makes her a chameleon of identity. She longs to be perfect, thus she wants to be everyone but herself. Estherâs desire to be carefree and a risk taker is stirred by the character of Doreen. Doreen was fashion-conscious, worldly, and lived a life on the edge, unlike Esther. She is Estherâs exact opposite, her rebellious side. This is evident when Esther expresses that âDoreen had intuition. Everything she said was like a voice speaking straight out of my own bonesâ (Plath 7). Jay Cee is just another identity Esther is eager to assume. Successful and famous is exactly what Esther has been working all her life for. Jay Cee is wise and could give direction or answers to all the questions Esther is confused about. Once again, Esther is looking for herself in other characters. She believes that Betsy is more like her. Betsy encompasses her view of virtue and goodness. Esther is not able to decide for herself, what she wants; this is why she incorporates the different identities of the characters that surround her and does not establish one for herself. Esther struggles to know herself and be self-motivated, she longs for acceptance not only from her peers, but also of herself. Esther feels that no matter where she goes or who she is, she is always in the âhellâ of her own mind ââŠwherever I sat-on the deck of a ship or a street cafĂ© in Paris or Bangkok I would be sitting under the same glass bell jar stewing, in my own sour airâ(Plath 185). This quotation introduces the symbol of the bell jar. Esther explains that no matter where she is, she exists in the âhellâ of her own mind. She is trapped inside herself. The bell jar of Estherâs madness separates her from the people she should care about. Estherâs suicidal urges come from this sense of suffocating isolation. Esther can no longer escape from her unhappiness. Jay Cee has forced her to take a good look at herself, and what she sees scares her. She retreats more within herself. The bell jar is covered tightly over her. She decides to quit on herself and all she has worked for. Esther feels a disconnection between the way other people view her life and the way she experiences life. By all external measures, Esther should feel happy, and excited, because she has overcome her middle-class small town background. Esther feels uncertain about her own abilities and about the reward that there abilities have earned her. Eventually the gap between societal expectation and her own feelings and experiences become so large that she feels she can no longer survive. Her personal and professional accomplishments have become a source not only of public satisfaction but also of frustration. Esther feels she is not good enough and tries to escape a world that shuns her and does not let her breath. She herself inflicts the thought of not being perfect enough; she seems to think that if she achieves perfection she achieves happiness. Throughout her life she had perfect grades and the perfect boyfriend, Buddy Willard. Her world come crashing down when Buddy confesses that he had sexual relations with a waitress one summer. Esther begins to think that she must find that perfect person inside her so she uses alter egos and personality adaptations, which lead her into confusion and self-denial. Esther feels she is being âstuffed farther and farther into a black, airless sack with no way outâ (King 28). Estherâs descent into depression sends her to an asylum for the mentally ill. Her illness reaches great severity. She becomes delusional, instantly hating her doctor. Her crying is filled with distress and anguish. Dr. Gordon makes no attempt to understand her suffering; he merely attempts to make her normal again with electroshock therapy, that increases rather than lessens her pain. She feels that the electroshock therapy is not a treatment but rather a punishment for some terrible, unknown crime. She describes it by saying âthen something bent down and took hold of me and shook me like the end of the world. Whee-ee-ee-ee-ee, it shrilled, through an air crackling with blue light, and with each flash a great jolt drubbed me till I thought my bones would break and sap fly out of me like a split plant, I wondered what terrible thing I had doneâ (Plath 143). Plathâs purpose for relating to the reader this very vivid description is to show what a person with mental illness might experience during a session of electroshock therapy. It gives us good reason to believe that she herself has experienced electroshock therapy. The idea of electric current passing through human beings, in order to ease their pain, was conceived by a scientist. The scientist witnessed that pigs that were electrocuted while being slaughtered (cutting their throats) suffered less than those that were not electrocuted. This is an idea that is cruel and appalling. Plathâs descriptive session of electroshock therapy is her way of creating awareness of the cruel procedures used on mentally ill patients. During her hospital stay, Esther reinforces the idea that mental illness is a defect to be hidden, sanitized, and denied. Instead of being an illness to be discussed, understood, or cured. A mentally ill or disturbed person is viewed with extreme disgust, by society. However, in Estherâs case it is different. Her insanity is expressed in a different way akin to what Tubman states in his analysis of the novel, âdespite the asylums and the shock treatment, Esther goes mad in a rather undisturbing way, partly because it is seen much less as a failure in herself rather than as a judgment on the world.â Estherâs mother told her âweâll act as if all this were a bad dreamâ (Plath 237). They were going to pretend that her stay in the asylum never occurred and that it was all a bad dream. Even though she was being treated by a psychiatrist, Dr. Gordon, Esther begins to dwell on suicide, and the shock therapy sends her into a deeper depression. Esther thinks that for someone in the âbell jar,â life itself is a bad dream. The âbell jarâ is symbolic, âa thin layer of glass that separates Esther from everyone, and the novelâs title, itself made of glass, is evolved from her notion of disconnection. The head of each mentally ill person is enclosed in a bell jar, choking on his own foul airâ (Moss 388). One rainy day, after visiting her fatherâs grave, she attempts suicide. She overdoses on prescription pills. Now desperate, her mother sends her to a state mental institution, where Esther meets Dr. Nolan. She gains Estherâs trust by being intuitive and sensitive to the Estherâs feelings and needs. Esther learns that it is all right to say that one hates oneâs mother, and that it is normal for a woman her age to want to be sexually active. Under compassionate supervision, and carefully conducted shock treatments; Esther begins to improve. Esther begins to think differently, and it is through this therapy that Esther begins to breath once again. She had been lost, the road ahead of her was dark and blurry. She was forced to invent and live in her own world. A world where she could be whoever she wanted. She had been living physically but not emotionally, until she begins to slowly recover from her depression. Esther, once out of the âbell jarâ, experiences reality. The fog has been lifted and she can see again. By overcoming some of her demons, Esther manages to become a productive member of society. She learns to free herself from the tyranny of othersâ expectations. Once she is able to reveal her true self in her own way, she develops new confidence and perspective. Esther achieves sufficient perspective to see that her struggle against this so-called âtyrannyâ of customs and expectations is not hers alone, but rather a general characteristic of the human condition. However, she is still oppressed by the threatening nature of the bell jar. âAll the heat and fear had purged itself. I felt surprisingly at peace. The bell jar hung, suspended, a few feet above my head. I was open to the circulating airâ (Plath 215). At last Esther is free, but not totally. The âbell jarâ still hangs over her head. It is like a dark cloud waiting to envelop her once again, in her madness. Further, Esther asks: âHow did I know that someday at college, in Europe, somewhere, anywhere that bell jar, with its stifling distortions, wouldnât descend again?â(Plath 241). Esther is able to go on with a seemingly functional life. But she feels like a ticking time bomb, waiting to explode. In this explosion she would once again lose herself. She wonders if she will be lost forever, never to be given another chance to be whole again. This is a terrible suffocating burden for her. Perhaps, this question offers further corroboration of Estherâs new, realistic self. On the other hand, we may hear in this question the voice of Estherâs autobiographical creator, for whom the prognosis is dark indeed. For the author, Sylvia Plath, the âbell jarâ did descend again, only months after the novel was accepted for publication, its author attempted suicide for a second and final time. Esther sees suicide not so much as self-destruction, but as a âtheatrical ritualâ which will free her from her âmade-upâ identity, and restore her unique self. It is her âimageâ (made-up identity) she wishes to murder. She wants to put an end to her pretentious twin that is her public persona. This image she has created of herself is a charade. It is her imitation of someone else, and totally artificial. Once Esther has freed herself from the âbell jarâ she feels renewed. She anxiously awaits her expected dismissal from the hospital. But before she is to be released she must appear before a committee that will decide whether she can leave the hospital. When Esther faces the interviewing committee, she narrates that âthe eyes and the faces all turned themselves towards me, and guiding myself by them, as if by a magical thread, I stepped into the roomâ (Plath 244) The thread would lead Esther out of the âfamiliar labyrinth of shoveled asylum paths, or it could be âthe thread that might lead me back to my old, bright salesmanshipâ(Plath 240). At last, Esther finally seems in control of her own life, she is guiding herself back into society, into that âtheatrical stageâ in which her future will be decided by the impression she makes on others. She has been, as she puts it, âborn twiceâpatched, retreated and approved for the roadâ(Plath 244). The author, Sylvia Plath, has given us an ironic twist to Estherâs recovery. She has arranged Joanâs suicide and Estherâs recovery as opposites. To the extent that Esther is left wondering, at Joanâs funeral, just what is it she thinks she is burying. Is it the âwry black imageâ of her madness, or the âbeaming doubleâ of her old best self? Joanâs demise and eventual burial is significantly related to the death of Estherâs many imposters. In a sense the suicide of this surrogate, Joan, is Estherâs salvation from herself. The struggle that Esther Greenwood went through to conquer her demons and find her true self, are very similar to human beings very own struggles in adolescence. They long for identity and self-realization. They want to be the popular person in school. Society has determined what is successful, and everybody wants the brass ring. In their quest for identity, individuals all go through what Esther Greenwood experienced. It is the normal quest of the human psyche. However, some are more emotionally fragile than others. For most people, searching for ones true self can be a lifelong journey. Very often it is the journey and the road of experiences that shape who they are. It is the people we encounter on this road that can either help or hinder our destinies. There is a little of Esther Greenwood in most people. The âbell jarâ, parental expectations, and societyâs pressures hang above everybodyâs heads. |
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