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- <text id=94TT0437>
- <title>
- Apr. 18, 1994: Books:Poets In Suicide Sex Shocker!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 18, 1994 Is It All Over for Smokers?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 80
- Books
- Poets In Suicide Sex Shocker!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Janet Malcolm explores the lurid obsession with Sylvia Plath
- </p>
- <p>By Andrea Sachs
- </p>
- <p> Just because connoisseurs of poetry rarely read the National
- Enquirer doesn't mean they don't crave sensationalism. Witness
- the enduring legend of Sylvia Plath more than three decades
- after the writer's death. Certainly Plath's reputation as a
- fierce, accomplished poet has endured, but it is the shocking
- story of her life that really fascinates the literary public.
- </p>
- <p> The details of Plath's suicide have assumed totemic significance
- for a cult of followers who regard her as St. Sylvia, the high
- priestess of suffering. On Feb. 11, 1963, she put her head in
- a gas oven in her London apartment as her two children, for
- whom she had left glasses of milk and a plate of bread and butter,
- slept in a nearby bedroom. Plath's husband Ted Hughes, a great
- poet who is now England's poet laureate, had left her months
- earlier for another woman. Before her death, few had ever heard
- of the 30-year-old American expatriate. But with the posthumous
- publication of Ariel, the bleak, violent yet beautiful volume
- of poetry she produced in the last months of her life, Plath's
- legend was born. In 1971 The Bell Jar, Plath's novel about her
- nervous breakdown during college, was published in America and
- became wildly popular.
- </p>
- <p> If Sylvia Plath were alive today, she would be a venerable 61
- years old. (Given the shift in the times, she also might be
- on Prozac.) But the poet who dies young is remembered in her
- youthful glory, a literary James Dean. Attention to Plath's
- life has been paid in inverse proportion to its brevity: five
- exhaustive biographies have been written about her. In addition,
- everyone who ever had lunch with Plath has seemingly felt compelled
- to write a memoir.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike Plath, who found eternal youth, those who shared her
- life have had to weather the ravages of time, not to mention
- public opprobrium. Janet Malcolm, the latest writer to mine
- the Plath myth, compares the spread of gossip about the poet
- to "an oil spill in the devastation it wreaked among Plath's
- survivors, who to this day are like birds covered with black
- ooze." No one has been more fouled by the Plath oobleck than
- Hughes. In The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes (Knopf;
- 208 pages; $23), Malcolm chronicles how generations of feminist
- writers have reviled Hughes for abandoning Plath and for tampering
- with and even destroying her work. (Hughes' reputation has not
- been helped by the fact that the woman for whom he left Plath,
- in a macabre deja vu, also gassed herself to death.)
- </p>
- <p> Malcolm is sympathetic to Hughes, although he nonetheless comes
- off poorly in her book, willing to sell the American rights
- to The Bell Jar, which Plath had published under a pseudonym
- in England and which her mother did not want to be published
- in the U.S., in order to buy a third home. Where Plath is concerned,
- Hughes plays two roles that are hopelessly in conflict: he is
- both Plath's faithless husband and also her literary executor,
- so whenever a writer is denied access to Plath's papers, he
- or she can accuse Hughes of trying to cover up his own guilt.
- He grants no interviews and has written no memoir. Instead of
- Hughes, Plath's biographers have had to deal with Olwyn, Hughes'
- cranky older sister, who has served as a combative intermediary
- for her absent brother. Malcolm gets no closer to the poet than
- the other Plathian detectives who have stalked him. She is reduced
- to lurking around the outside of his British home, uninvited.
- </p>
- <p> The tug-of-war between the Hugheses and the Plath scholars gives
- Malcolm the opportunity to explore the biographer's craft, which
- she likens to the work of "the professional burglar, breaking
- into a house." The book also represents Malcolm's answer to
- her own critics. Last June a jury in a widely publicized libel
- suit by psychoanalyst Jeffrey Masson found that Malcolm had
- fabricated quotations in a series of articles about him for
- the New Yorker. Despite her setback in court, Malcolm remains
- undeterred; The Silent Woman appeared in the New Yorker shortly
- after the trial, and Malcolm has not muted her intense, opinionated
- style.
- </p>
- <p> Malcolm has a tendency to hog the stage; her sense of identification
- with Plath as another literary young lady of the 1950s is so
- often trumpeted that readers not interested in purchasing an
- autobiography of Janet Malcolm should consider themselves forewarned.
- But when Malcolm remembers her subject, she is insightful. Plath's
- appeal, suggests Malcolm, lies in her "not-niceness," her willingness
- to say what many feel but dare not articulate. Plath "was able--she had been elected--to confront what most of the rest
- of us fearfully shrank from," writes Malcolm. Furthermore, Plath
- gave voice to feminism before its time, instinctively distrusting
- the domestic limitations imposed on women of her generation.
- </p>
- <p> Too many biographies later, the memory of Sylvia Plath has worn
- thin, like a game of telephone where the original message has
- been lost in the retelling. When an acquaintance of Plath's
- confides in The Silent Woman that she has gone to a hypnotist
- to retrieve further memories of the poet, the reader understands
- that it is time to go back to the source. The true, meaningful
- record of this poet is near at hand--in her writings. It is
- there that Sylvia Plath--harsh, brilliant, astonishing--may be found.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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