Book details
The Bell Jar
by Sylvia Plath
1948
About the book
Esther Greenwood, a college student from Massachusetts, wins a competitive summer internship at a fashion magazine in mid-century New York City. Despite her academic success and professional opportunities, she experiences a growing sense of detachment from the social expectations of marriage and career. The narrative tracks her psychological decline as she returns home, undergoes failed electroshock treatments, and eventually enters a private psychiatric facility following a suicide attempt. Plath uses the titular bell jar to represent the suffocating distortions of clinical depression and the rigid gender roles of the 1950s.
Readers interested in the intersection of mental pathology and societal pressure study this novel to understand the reality of living with a mood disorder. It appeals to those examining the history of psychiatry and the specific limitations placed on women’s intellectual autonomy in the post-war era. The audience gains a stark, unsentimental perspective on the failure of conventional social scripts to provide meaning. One leaves the book with a technical map of a nervous breakdown and the internal logic of isolation.
Details
- Published
- 1948
- Language
- EN