Wednesday, December 25, 2019
The Role Of Gender Roles From A Young Age And Plath s Daddy
females being condemned to a life of dissatisfaction and depression. It is crucial to understand the significance of gender roles from a young age and Plathââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËDaddyââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"fits perfectly into the Freudian concept of the Electra complexâ⬠. This is evident in the repetitive structure of the words, short and structured lines and the continuous use of the rhyme (/u/) throughout the poem which forms an almost bleak nursery-rhyme. The speaker s obsession with her father is revealed by the imago , an individualââ¬â¢s fixation on the childhood image of their father with various dark and heavy adjectives such as ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠, ââ¬Å"marble-heavyâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"greyâ⬠symbolising the unresolved anxiety within an abandoned child. The speaker remains in the fearful state ofâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦The determiner ââ¬Å"everyâ⬠suggesting women naturally succumb to becoming ââ¬Ëmale-identifiedââ¬â¢ as radical feminists believe women ââ¬Å"have been conditioned to identify with the male aggressor, to be aroused by male dominance.â⬠Females are ââ¬Å"conditionedâ⬠to conform to males through the patriarchal family, this is clear as Plath ââ¬Å"makes a modelâ⬠of her father through her husband, Ted Hughes, as she needed a substitute male figure. Hughes acknowledged this in his poem ââ¬ËThe Shotââ¬â¢ , Your real target stood behind me/ Your Daddyâ⬠, arguing that Plath projected her unresolved issues onto him, when the ââ¬Å"real targetâ⬠for her depression was her father. This exemplifies the belief that women ââ¬Å"have been conditioned to identify with the maleâ⬠. The poem has a form of sixteen stanzas with five lines in each, reflecting her built up emotions over the decades as free verse such as in ââ¬ËArielââ¬â¢ would make her appear vulnerable. The concluding line ââ¬Å"Daddy, daddy, you bastard, Iââ¬â¢m throughâ⬠condemns her fatherââ¬â¢s tyrannical nature through the repetition of Daddy, and addition of bastard to make this denunciation final. The tone articulated in the final line is that of a liberated woman, perhaps why Plath is seen as a feminist figure by many. Thus, ââ¬ËDaddyââ¬â¢ depicts how identity is formed for the archetypal feminine figure through emancipation from the authoritarian father figure. Similarly, the excessive reliance on paternal figures is evident through Clarissa in ââ¬ËEnduring Loveââ¬â¢ whose father passed
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