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Friday 5 March 2010

Sylvia Plath and racism


It took me a while to decide on the title of this piece. At first I was going to call it "The Dark Side of Sylvia Plath", but I then realised that a lot of Plath's work doesn't really have much of a light side to it.

Sylvia Plath is highly regarded by many, not only for her dark, introspective verse but also her caustic, observational prose, diverse life experience and razor-sharp mind. She attracts a great deal of posthumous sympathy for her maltreatment at the hands of her late husband, Ted Hughes, which many believe contributed to her untimely end. She has been heavily praised by the feminist movement for many decades, and cited on many shortlists of great feminist icons alongside the likes of Virginia Woolf. The most famous example of her female empowerment verse would probably be Lady Lazarus, ending with the immortal line, "out of the ash/I rise with my red hair/And I eat men like air".

Her work has been greatly influential, not only on other poets but also, it seems, on some musicians.

Ryan Adams wrote a song about her and it is perhaps no coincidence that Annie Lennox released an album in 1995 entitled Medusa. Kate Bush also made her long-awaited comeback in 2005 with a concept album named Aerial (albeit with a different spelling to Plath's Ariel).

So it was exactly because of this high reputation - arguably well deserved - that I was shocked to discover just how racially dubious Plath's work could be.

Reading discussions on Plath and race issues, it's often her references to Jews and the Holocaust that get the most attention. The most famous example of this would probably be "Daddy" in which Plath presents a complex love/hate relationship between a father figure and herself, ultimately denouncing the father figure and presenting him as a Nazi. She then compares her plight at the hands of this man to that of Jewish Holocaust victims:


An engine, an engine
Chuffing me off like a Jew.

A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen.

I began to talk like a Jew.
I think I may well be a Jew.


The snows of the Tyrol, the clear beer of Vienna

Are not very pure or true.
With my gipsy ancestress and my weird luck
And my Taroc pack and my Taroc pack
I may be a bit of a Jew.


There are many other such references in her verse, including in the aforementioned Lady Lazarus where she uses the simile "bright as a Nazi lampshade" to describe her skin's magical renewal.

Many Plathian scholars also interpret The Thin People as referring to European Jews. If this is true, it is perhaps more worrying than the previous example as it presents the Jews - "so weedy a race" - as gaining power, and going from being victims to coming "later, into our bad dreams/their menace/not guns, not abuses/but a thin silence".

[It is also interesting to note that Adolf Hitler's propagandists characterised the disabled and other undesirables as emaciated "useless eaters", ripe for execution. Whether or not Plath was aware of this is unclear.]

From discussions on poetry newsgroups and elsewhere it seems some readers do see Plath's Holocaust references as crass - and indeed you could say that it is insensitive to use such horrific images of genocide to describe your own plight, especially if you're not Jewish.

But when I first read Daddy and Lady Lazarus I saw Plath - a young woman of German and Austrian background - trying to come to terms with the horrors of Nazism and identify closely with its victims.

"She wants to feel and think like a Jew", I thought. "She wants to get close to the victims of the worst kinds of suffering and empathise with them".

So I put the issues of taste aside. I could see that Plath had an interest in the darker side of life and all the flaws and foibles that come with being human - from our inescapable mortality to our messy bodily fluids.

I also noted the reference to African slaves in the third stanza of the Arrival of the Bee Box, symbolising the creatures she longed to set free, and I approved of its use. I interpreted it as Plath literally 'feeling' the plight of the oppressed- a very effective piece of imagery.

But then I made the mistake - if you can call it a mistake - of reading extracts from her dairies.

Published in 2000, the Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath contained previously unseen material, charting Plath's life from age 11 till her suicide in 1963. The work is highly detailed and shows Plath's well-attuned eye for human observation.

Unfortunately, it also shows her use of blatant anti-Semitism.


“...the fat, gold-toothed, greasy-haired Jews sunning themselves, and oiling their plump, rutted flesh.” (Journals, July 1950-53, p.96)


“Slimy dark curly Jewish Americans saunter down, expensive tweed jackets” (Journals, July 1956- August 1956, p. 261)


“Rodman came in with Baskin: a surprise: no fat oily Jewish intellectual but a thin, wiry, tan fellow with dark, queerly vulnerable brown eyes, very lean, almost hollow chested” (Journals, 28 August 1957- 14 October 1958, p. 407)


“A weak kindly escort, Ed Cohn, too gentle, too sweet and soft” (Journals, 12 December 1958 – 15 November 1959 p.463


“Jews, coarse - tan- faced” (Journals, June 1957 – June 1960)


“...as the witchy Jewess in the green arsenic dressing-gown told me on my walk...” (Journals June 1956 – March 1961, p. 608)


In case you think I've taken these quotes out of context - they are printed verbatim, straight off the page. Plath used no inverted commas nor any perceivable irony to show she was being tongue-in-cheek. It doesn't take a linguist to see that the adjectives used to describe Jews here are entirely negative; even the one Jew she meets who she doesn't consider repulsive and disgusting is "weak", "too gentle" and "soft".

Other minority groups don't come in for much flak in Plath's Journals; black people are portrayed in a more or less neutral manner, and gay men are simply discussed in a shrugged-shoulders, non-committal way.

So what do we - poetry readers, fans of Sylvia Plath - conclude from this?

Racism in classic English literature and poetry is not uncommon: many are familiar with the stereotypes behind Shakespeare's Shylock, Dickens' Fagin and T.S Eliot's references to "red-eyed scavengers".

But the difference is that Sylvia Plath is consistently celebrated as a liberal heroine - the very antithesis of such 'sexist pigs' as John Buchan, Graham Greene or - ugh! - Ian Fleming.

And yet side by side, could you honestly tell the difference between the racist language of Plath and that of Buchan - or to take some more highbrow examples: Waugh, Greene or Trollope?

I don't think you could.

It shows us that we cannot get too sentimental about our favourite authors and poets. Can we ever separate the artist from their art, the poet from their poetry? Should we?

Perhaps that's a discussion for another day.

But I'm afraid my opinion of Sylvia Plath will now forever be coloured by those few coarse, slimy words.


Extracts from The Journals of Sylvia Plath 1950-1962, Faber and Faber, 2000

ISBN 0-571-19704-3

17 comments:

  1. That's not quite true. The first anecdote in her journals have some nasty comments about black people as well. Disgustingly, her discrimination was pretty indiscriminate.

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  2. Thanks for filling me in on that.

    I just found it interesting that there was little mention of Plath's racism anywhere, whereas other authors and poets have been put under intense scrutiny for that very reason.

    Perhaps a kind of favouritism at work?

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  3. I am currently reading Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams which has several diary excerpts...and I was shocked to see her repeated use of "Jewy" as an adjective to describe people's features (mainly their nose and head.) I googled Plath+racism and chanced upon your post. Quite shocking to read those extracts, as I also held Plath in great esteem.

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    1. Thank-you for your comment Meenkshi and for the interesting quote.

      It is indeed shocking, particularly when Sylvia Plath comes across as fairly liberal and is generally considered as such.

      The reason I wrote this post was that nobody else seemed to have picked up on Plath's racism - which was surprising, as it is so blatant. Most Plath scholars seem to see her as being very anti-Nazi and pro-Jewish, too.

      It's been a couple of years since I posted this and I have yet to receive any defences of those offensive passages from Plath's fans.

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  4. Artists are still subject to their environment, to their upbringing, to their traumas. Sylvia Plath was in no means a perfect woman. This is a woman who battled with some serious demons, and didn't hide that. Not to be forgotten that Ted Hughes left her for Jewish woman. She was not perfect, never claimed to be. In her poem, Daddy, she says her father was like a Nazi and she like a Jew- there may have been the assumption that she was "sensitive" to the cause. The art is in her pain.

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  5. I just read beebox - and noticed the ambiguous Africans on transport metaphor - and realised this is not the first time - the first being the crass reference to Jews you refer to. So I googled it! What an excellent article I found.

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  6. Thank you for enlightening me. I did enjoy 'The Bell Jar' , intending to delve further into her back catalogue. I will now revise that position.

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  7. Anyone with a mental health problem comparing their suffering to that of the jews of the holocaust (ie in 'Daddy') has GOT to be rather '(in)discriminate' in their thinking. I wonder what you make of Plath's "nigger-eye" (stanza 4 of titular poem 'Ariel')...

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  8. Excellent article and interesting observations. I also found that not many actually see her racism as something worth to be mentioned at all which is rather depressing.
    And after reading this I feel the need to adjust her position as a poet/person in my mind n stop romanticizing this woman & her artistic value.
    By the way I'm currently reading , and I repeatedly encountered phrases like "Chinese woman"/"sick Indian" etc as description of how ugly her reflection in the mirror is. And it's extremely disturbing for me to find such racism in this supposedly great literature work.
    Just so glad to find someone noticing this too.

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  9. I see that this blog entry is over 3 years old, but I have to thank you for posting it. As a huge admirer of Plath's poetry since high school (I even lived in her dorm room at Smith during my studies there in the 1980s), I purchased the Unabridged Journals in 2000 as a special gift to myself. Much to my horror and disappointment, I read the offensive racial profiling. At the time, I was too naive to separate the poet from the poems. I felt betrayed and disappointed, and stopped reading her poems altogether. Not until this year as I participated in a discussion with my MFA faculty mentor concerning poets and racism did the topic surface again. My professor was unaware of these journal entries. Our discussion continues, but we both agree that the authority of Plath's poems is diminished by her racist stance. She is no vanguard for female empowerment. I wish more people were aware of these facts and thus end the Plath 'mystique' which has enthralled so many readers and writers, myself included.

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  10. I am so glad I ran across this blog. I am a African-American who fell in love with Sylvia Plath after the movie "Sylvia" was released in 2004. I began to read her poetry "Bell Jar," "Ariel," and "Crossing the Water." It saddens me that with her undeniable talent for poetry, she has to tarnish it with racism. In her poem "Lady Lazarus" there is a line that says "my skin is the color of a Nazi lampshade." It's been said that Nazi's used the skin of holocaust victims to make lampshades.

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  11. I really enjoyed reading "The Bell Jar" for a fiction writing class I took. After reading her poems in "Ariel" today, I was really disappointed with her use of the "n" word and her use of Jewish suffering as a metaphor. I found the bit about the bees confusing. Overall, it lessens my esteem for her. For another mid-century writer with a razor wit and a more enlightened mindset (who also committed suicide, unfortunately) I'd suggest Dorothy Parker. She left her estate to Dr. Martin Luther King and the NAACP, and wrote some outspoken (and funny) pieces condemning racism.

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  12. I just finished The Bell Jar and I really enjoyed it. She was an amazing writer, and I really appreciated her feminist commentary. BUT I was very unimpressed with how she talked about people of other races. When she's looking ugly and exhausted, she describes herself as looking like a "chinese woman with smudged eyes" and then later on as an "Indian". At one point she says her skin looks ugly because it's "yellow as a Chinaman's". I found that really strange. There is only one black character in the book, and she calls him "the Negro", which I might expect from writing before the 30s, but from an "enlightened" feminist in the late 50s? Weird. Every racist comment she made left me with a bad taste in my mouth. I was hoping it might all just be a coincidence, but since she made such comments in her own personal diary, she must have been quite a bigot. It's very disappointing, but then she was a very flawed human being in many ways. Reminds me of another writer I love, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, who was an amazingly intelligent feminist, but who was also very racist. What a shame.

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    1. I agree! I'm Chinese and I see all races as beautiful in their own right. And I was shocked because she seemed to display sympathy for the rosenburgs

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  13. "and it is perhaps no coincidence that Annie Lennox released an album in 1995 entitled Medusa. Kate Bush also made her long-awaited comeback in 2005 with a concept album named Aerial (albeit with a different spelling to Plath's Ariel)."

    I don't see any reason why those would be referencing Plath at all. I assume you know that "Medusa" is something that's been around longer than Plath and that Aerial is a legit word and not a "different" spelling of Ariel?

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  14. Perhaps Jewish people should STOP trying to erase the way a large number of people felt about them during "that time period". When discussing the ills of racism regarding Black Americans, Jews are quick to encourage Blacks to "move on" or "understand that kind of thinking during that period of time" Perhaps all of you who want to diminish Sylvia Plath's work or dare I say boycott it, is simply PATHETIC! Her views were racist across the board! Sorry, Jews were not exclusive element to her bigotry and ignorance! Get over yourselves!

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  15. I'm always disappointed to learn that a favorite author is racist. I won't stop enjoying their work, but it highlights the importance of diversity in the arts and the need for intersectionality in studies. It also makes me think about where I should put my money.

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