Abstract: The American literary canons, mainly those of the nineteen fifties and the nineteen sixties, had consistently portrayed women as subservient citizens. Women in the American culture had been put under men’s domination and thus lost their identity and been unable to determine their own fate. They played roles long prescribed by men, both in the home and in their social milieu. As products of the era, a number of Sylvia Plath’s poems depict confrontation against this phenomenon of patriarchy in which women have been inferior to and abused by men; they fight for freedom and to regain their true roles as women and human beings
The aim of this article is to give the degree of patriarchal suppression by comparing it to Holocaus...
This thesis is submitted in a partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of ...
The aim of this article is to give the degree of patriarchal suppression by comparing it to Holocaus...
Abstract: The American literary canons, mainly those of the nineteen fiftiesand the nineteen sixties...
Women have been struggling to liberate themselves from subjugation by their male counterparts from t...
Sylvia Plath’s poems mirror the ideological aspirations of its social context, and the construction ...
Women share equal rights and responsibilities in society but unfortunately, they suffer a lot based ...
Abstract The poetry that Plath wrote embodies the interlocking of culture politics with the intimacy...
This paper discusses the two concepts of misandry and resistance in two famous poems by Sylvia Plath...
The study of Sylvia Plath\u27s poetry sheds light on the various approaches that can be used to read...
In American history the 1960s mark the beginning of reform movements fighting for the equality of mi...
In this study, the effect of patriarchal society in 1960’s America to Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar i...
This paper aims at the concept of Feminism in the select poems of Sylvia Plath. It analyses Plath?s ...
This paper dwells on the analysis of the motif complex of women world in Sylvia Plath’s poetry (1932...
By examining critically poems in which Sylvia Plath’s speakers appear as daughters, wives, and mothe...
The aim of this article is to give the degree of patriarchal suppression by comparing it to Holocaus...
This thesis is submitted in a partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of ...
The aim of this article is to give the degree of patriarchal suppression by comparing it to Holocaus...
Abstract: The American literary canons, mainly those of the nineteen fiftiesand the nineteen sixties...
Women have been struggling to liberate themselves from subjugation by their male counterparts from t...
Sylvia Plath’s poems mirror the ideological aspirations of its social context, and the construction ...
Women share equal rights and responsibilities in society but unfortunately, they suffer a lot based ...
Abstract The poetry that Plath wrote embodies the interlocking of culture politics with the intimacy...
This paper discusses the two concepts of misandry and resistance in two famous poems by Sylvia Plath...
The study of Sylvia Plath\u27s poetry sheds light on the various approaches that can be used to read...
In American history the 1960s mark the beginning of reform movements fighting for the equality of mi...
In this study, the effect of patriarchal society in 1960’s America to Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar i...
This paper aims at the concept of Feminism in the select poems of Sylvia Plath. It analyses Plath?s ...
This paper dwells on the analysis of the motif complex of women world in Sylvia Plath’s poetry (1932...
By examining critically poems in which Sylvia Plath’s speakers appear as daughters, wives, and mothe...
The aim of this article is to give the degree of patriarchal suppression by comparing it to Holocaus...
This thesis is submitted in a partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of ...
The aim of this article is to give the degree of patriarchal suppression by comparing it to Holocaus...