The Bell Jar Report

1223 Words3 Pages

Justin Dunbar-Leobold
Period. 2
4/20/16
IRU #7

Book: The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

Section One:

A college student named Esther Greenwood goes to New York from Massachusetts for a job as a guest editor for a magazine under Jay Cee. At her home which at the time is a women’s hotel, she and eleven other students are pampered and swamped with presents from their sponsors. All the students are having a good time, but Esther feels deprived. She is worried by the execution of the Rosenbergs who in 1953 are sentenced to death for espionage. After attending a banquet Esther suffers from food poisoning "The sickness rolled through me in great waves. After each wave it would fade away and leave me limp as a wet leaf and shivering all over and then I
She spends the summer with her mother. Eventually, she decides to make plans to write her own novel. She also plans to start on her senior thesis. However, she suddenly has feelings of invalidity. The same feelings that she had in New York after all that happened. She goes into a very deep depression. Because of this she completely stops sleeping, writing, and taking care of herself. These feelings even impaired her ability to write "But when I took up my pen, my hand made big, jerky letters like those of a child, and the lines sloped down the page from left to right almost diagonally, as if they were loops of string lying on the paper, and someone had come along and blown them askew." (106) Her mother grows increasingly worried for her daughter and decides to pay a visit to a psychiatrist named Dr. Gordon. Dr. Gordon believes that electric shock therapy is the most logical treatment for Esther. Unsurprisingly though, this awful treatment does no good for Esther. In fact, she becomes so unstable as a result of it, that it pushes her over the edge and she chooses to take her own life. She attempts suicide four times using four different methods, but they all fail in the
And before she finally found her way again, she had become a depressed, suicidal woman. The time she spent in the first hospital made her even worse, but after being transferred to another private hospital she regains her grasp on reality and her sanity. And she also becomes able to trust the doctors more than at the previous hospital she was at "It wasn't the shock treatment that struck me, so much as the bare-faced treachery of Dr. Nolan. I loved her. I had given her my trust on a platter and told her everything and she had promised, faithfully, to warn me ahead of time if ever I had to have another shock treatment." (173) She then finally is able to continue her studies at

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