|
The Bloomsbury Handbook to Sylvia Plath
Hardback
Main Details
Description
The Bloomsbury Handbook to Sylvia Plath covers a full range of contemporary scholarship on Plath's work, including such topics as: New insights from the publication of Plath's letters Current scholarly perspectives: feminist and gender studies, archival studies, race, disability studies, space and place Plath's poetry, her novel, The Bell Jar, and her writing for children Plath's literary contexts, from the Classics and the long poem to W.B. Yeats, Edith Sitwell, Ruth Fainlight, Carol Ann Duffy, and Ted Hughes Plath's broadcasting work for the BBC New perspectives on media and pedagogy, including service learning and the digital humanities.
Author Biography
Anita Helle is Professor of English at Oregon State University, USA and founding Director of the School of Writing, Literature, and Film (2011-2015). She is the editor of The Unravelling Archive: Essays on Sylvia Plath (2007). Amanda Golden is Assistant Professor of English at the New York Institute of Technology, USA. She is the author of Annotating Modernism (2019) and editor of This Business of Words: Reassessing Anne Sexton (2016). Maeve O'Brien is a Teaching Fellow at Ulster University, UK.
ReviewsThe word indispensable can be used indiscriminately at times, but this collection of excellent essays by excellent scholars is the definition of indispensable, both for Plath scholarship and for twenty-first century poetry criticism. Read it. Read all of it. * Philip McGowan, Professor of American Literature, Queen's University Belfast, UK * This substantial compendium of exciting and original scholarship promises to reshape the study of Plath and her work. Helle, Golden, and O'Brien have brought together chapters informed by life writing, pedagogy, disability studies, gender studies, and archive studies, and have positioned Plath among other writers-and her own readers-in ways that thrillingly illuminate her oeuvre. Standout pieces include much-needed interventions on race, upon which those working in Plath studies will hopefully build. Through their judicious and creative selection of essays, the editors of this major contribution offer new thinking about the poet's archive, her readers, her sociohistorical moment, and her cultural significance that have implications for scholars well beyond the single-author field. * Janine Utell, author of Literary Couples and 20th-Century Life Writing: Narrative and Intimacy * The editors of this comprehensive collection easily make the case for more scholarly and critical work on Sylvia Plath. They cite her evolving and expanding archive and publications, including a restored edition of Ariel, the edition of Plath's collected letters, and Emory University's recent acquisition of the Harriet Rosenstein papers. Not only are their new things to say about Sylvia Plath, whose "global stature,"needs no defense, there are new approaches to the study of her work and life that this volume explores. * Feminist Modernist Studies Journal *
|