Daddy Dearest
Sylvia Plath's "Daddy," written on October 12, 1962 and posthumously published in 1965's Ariel, is one of the author's most well-known poems, though it may be considered one of her most controversial. Plath's vivid description and use of the Holocaust imagery to draw parallels to her relationship with her father, Otto Plath, a German immigrant who passed away shortly after Plath's eighth birthday, and her husband Ted Hughes. In "Daddy," Plath expresses her frustration at her father and how he has inadvertently defined her future relationships with men.
It has been speculated that "Daddy" deals with Plath's deep attachment to her father's memory and how it had affected her life. Plath, herself, described that the poem was about "a girl with an Elektra complex." "Daddy, I have had to kill you./You died before I had time -- " may be an indication that Plath is trying to move past her attachment to her father as the main male figure in her life. Plath voices her frustrations at her father's premature death and continues to express her deep love for her father through her suicide attempt with the hoping to join him in death. Plath writes, "I was ten when they buried you./At twenty I tried to die/And get back, back, back to you."
In "Daddy," Plath sympathizes with the Jews as she feels betrayed by Germans, in this case her father. Plath exploits the "oppressor-oppressed" dynamic by describing how her...
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