Sylvia plath education

Sylvia Plath

Sylvia Plath was born on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts. Her mother, Aurelia Schober, was a master’s student at Boston University when she met Plath’s father, Otto Plath, who was her professor. They were married in January of 1932. Otto taught both German and biology, with a focus on apiology, the study of bees.

In 1940, when Plath was eight years old, her father died as a result of complications from diabetes. He had been strict, and both his authoritarian attitudes and his death drastically defined Plath’s relationships and her poems—most notably in her elegiac and infamous poem “Daddy.”

Plath kept a journal from the age of eleven and published her poems in regional magazines and newspapers. Her first national publication was in the Christian Science Monitor in 1950, just after graduating from high school. In 1950, Plath matriculated at Smith College, where she graduated summa cum laude in 1955.

After graduation, Plath moved to Cambridge, England, on a Fulbright Scholarship. In early 1956, she attended a party and met the English poet Ted

Plath, Sylvia

Plath, Sylvia (27 October 1932–11 February 1963), writer, was born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, the older child of Otto Plath and Aurelia Schober. Her father was a professor of German and entomology (a specialist on bees) at Boston University; her mother, a high school teacher, had been his student. Both parents valued learning, and Sylvia and her brother Warren, born two years later, were encouraged to excel intellectually. In 1940 Otto Plath died of complications from surgery after his leg had to be amputated because of diabetes mellitus. When Aurelia Plath secured a job teaching medical record keeping at Boston University, she moved the family to Wellesley, an upper-middle-class suburb of Boston, with the hope that the children would benefit from the good schools there. Living in a largely adult milieu, Sylvia was not unhappy. Studious and interested in art, she became sensitive, however, to the family’s financial worries.

When Plath was awarded a scholarship to attend Smith College, she was already a published poet, having written verse since childhood. I

Sylvia Plath

American poet and writer (1932–1963)

"Plath" redirects here. For other people, see Plath (surname).

Sylvia Plath (; October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) was an American poet and author. She is credited with advancing the genre of confessional poetry and is best known for The Colossus and Other Poems (1960), Ariel (1965), and The Bell Jar, a semi-autobiographical novel published shortly before her suicide in 1963. The Collected Poems was published in 1981, which included previously unpublished works. For this collection Plath was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in Poetry in 1982, making her the fourth to receive this honor posthumously.[1]

Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Plath graduated from Smith College in Massachusetts and the University of Cambridge, England, where she was a student at Newnham College. Plath later studied with Robert Lowell at Boston University, alongside poets Anne Sexton and George Starbuck. She married fellow poet Ted Hughes in 1956, and they lived together in the United States and then in England. Their relationship was

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