The Bell Jar (The Bell Jar) is the only novel by Sylvia Plath, originally published under the pseudonym Victoria Lucas in 1963. The novel is semi-autobiographical, with the names of places and people changed to prevent outrages. However, after the suicide of Sylvia, the novel was published under his real name, which caused great offence. A woman portrayed in the book as "Joan" won the trial that he recognized that the novel as homosexual .Esther manages somehow to manage these moments of life in New York, then returns to her mother, she holds responsible for the death of her diabetic father. She quickly plunges inexorably into depression, especially with severe insomnia. She consults a psychiatrist, who prescribed a therapy electroshock. This therapy does not prevent the increase attempts at suicide thereafter, the last and most serious being recorded at the end of chapter thirteen. This passage describes accurately the facts of the life of Sylvia Path: Esther left a note saying she left for a long walk, hiding in the cellar of the house of his mother and swallows fifty sleeping pills. She survives the attempt, which leads to a mental institution where she will make new friends, and where it will be again subjected to treatment with ECT. Esther finally loses her virginity with Irwin, a professor of mathematics; chapter nineteen, towards the end of the book, in a climate apocalypse, since she suffered a bleeding vagina as it must be admitted rushed to the hospital (Sylvia, 2009).
Answer2)
The narrator, Esther Greenwood, nineteen, is one of the winners of a poetry contest organized by a fashion magazine. As such, it will pass, with other winners, part of the summer in New York, at the time of execution of the couple Rosenberg (parallel real fact: Sylvia Plath was the recipient of such assistance, for magazine American Miss, the same year, in 1953). Esther became friends with Doreen, a flapper and, even if the mistake a certain point of view, it tries to be like him in all things, including trying to lose her virginity every time she has occasionally these attempts became an obsession for her unhealthy. Futile receptions in the evenings, she leads a kind of social life which it is unaccustomed. The book is named, "The Bell Jar" by the end of the book where the protagonist, and in the process of healing of the crisis, explains that people with nerve problems are isolated from the world by a bell glass so that they can only breathe your own stale air. Even when cured, that bell always hanging over their heads, threatening to fall back on their lives. The Bell Jar is a book filled with irony, especially in terms of the parallel with the life of the author. Thus, Esther makes continual reference to his hatred of children and refusing to consider having, while Sylvia Plath had two children with the poet English Ted ...