Esther Greenwood In Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar

736 Words2 Pages

“The Bell Jar,” Sylvia Plath’s first and only novel, follows the life of college student Esther Greenwood. The story takes us through a few months of her young adult life; from a magazine internship in New York City to the Boston suburb she grew up in. Esther becomes incredibly dissatisfied with her life, worrying about what she wants to and will be able to do after college. She attempts suicide numerous times, coming closest to success after she swallows a large amount of sleeping pills. She survives this attempt and is admitted to multiple mental hospitals, where she steadily recovers. One major aspect of Esther’s life that I relate to is her dissatisfaction and confusion about her long-term goals and career choices. While on an impromptu date with a UN interpreter, Esther finds herself pondering about her existence. She imagines “[her] life branching out before me like [a] green fig tree,” each fig representing what she can make of her life after she finishes college. She sees a traditional life with a happy home and family, a …show more content…

She discusses how she “hate[s] the idea of serving men in any way” while on the topic of learning shorthand and becoming a secretary. She rejects traditional expectations of women during the 1960’s, the time during which this book was written and takes place, and refuses to get married. Esther also idolizes powerful and respected women such as her editor in New York, Jay Cee, and the famous writer who is responsible for Esther’s scholarship, Philomena Guinea. Both of these women have careers that would normally be for a man, which shows that Esther’s ambitions do not correlate with traditionally feminine jobs or lifestyles. While I do not outright reject those kinds of social norms, I believe that they can stifle the aspirations of many women who wish to pursue less orthodox paths in

Open Document