Thursday, January 23, 2020
Present the way in which imprisonment is presented in The Bell Jar Essa
Present the way in which imprisonment is presented in The Bell Jar   The bell jar is an inverted glass jar, generally used to display an   object of scientific curiosity.    Present the way in which imprisonment is presented in ââ¬ËThe Bell Jarââ¬â¢    The bell jar is an inverted glass jar, generally used to display an  object of scientific curiosity, contain a certain kind of gas, or  maintain a vacuum. For Esther, the bell jar symbolizes madness. When  gripped by insanity, she feels as if she is inside an airless jar that  distorts her perspective on the world and prevents her from connecting  with the people around her. At the end of the novel, the bell jar has  lifted, but she can sense that it still hovers over her, waiting to  drop at any moment.    The narrative technique used in The Bell Jar is a first person  narrative. Straight away we get the idea of imprisonment through  elements of the unhappy narrative voice in the early chapters. The  first sentence of Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar alerts the reader to the  conflicts that will be dealt with in this semi-autobiographical novel:  "It was a queer, sultry summer, the summer they electrocuted the  Rosenbergââ¬â¢s, and I didn't know what I was doing in New York." The  speaker will tell us in the next few sentences that she is "stupid"  and that she feels "sick," and that she is preoccupied with death.  Like Holden Caulfield in Catcher in the Rye, this young, college age,  girl-woman is experiencing an adolescent crisis. When Esther Greenwood  tells us in the first sentence that this is "the summer they  electrocuted the Rosenbergââ¬â¢s," we get a picture not only of that  summer's being nauseating, sultry, and death-oriented, but that this  young girl's attitudes and life experiences are ...              ...e Plath uses characters such as buddy Willard, using  a clever writing technique to show his relationship with others, how  people viewed him, his actions and physical description. Through Buddy  we can have a better understanding of Estherââ¬â¢s situation. Plath uses  the technique of flashback for suspense and to delay the plot. A lot  of similes and metaphors are used to contribute to imprisonment. For  example similes reflecting the 1950ââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëyellow as cinnamonââ¬â¢.    Overall, I think that Plath is trying to convey the idea that women  were being placed in a constricted role in society live as if in a  bell jar, able to see the outside world of exciting work and  self-determined men, but unable to live it. People suffering from  emotional illness are also living as if under a bell jar, isolated  from others and unable to escape the distortions of their view of the  world.                      
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