Verified Document

Plath Gender Roles According To Plath's The Essay

Plath Gender Roles According to Plath's the Applicant

The assignment of gender roles is one of the most determinant and irresistible forces in our society. Powerful constructs persist from one generation to the next to indoctrinate us with the duties culturally befitting man and woman. And in a distinctly patriarchal society, these constructs also carry considerable emotional hazard to the feminine experience. So is this described in Sylvia Plath's "The Applicant." The poem, included in Plath's 2nd poetry collection, Ariel, was released in 1965. That Plath committed suicide two years before its released suggests that the despair contained here within was a permeating force in her life.

Indeed, 'The Applicant' is consumed with a numb kind of melancholy that Plath seems to assert comes from a lifetime of objectification and obsequiousness to the will of man. In something that resembles a job interview, the opening of Plath's poem describes the experience of being judged, scrutinized...

This suggests that the experience of courtship for women is not simply absent of romance but also of free will. Women are passively selected rather than directly engaged in a process of determining compatibility. And ultimately, she suggests, those who aren't made into charity cases by horrible deformities are otherwise simply to be settled upon by carnivorous men.
And once this is done, Plath describes a life of servile isolation. Worse still, Plath seems to assert, is the notion that a woman is presented with this opportunity at servility as though it is her best chance at happiness. Plath remarks, "Open your hand. / Empty? Empty. Here is a hand / To fill it and willing / To bring teacups and roll away headaches / and do whatever you tell it / Will you marry it?."

Here, Plath makes promises to man and woman a like. She is promised a hand to hold and in exchange, is given protection from the harsh realities of the world. The man…

Sources used in this document:
Works Cited:

Plath, S. (1965). The Applicant. Online at http://www.eliteskills.com/analysis_poetry/The_Applicant_by_Sylvia_Plath_analysis.php
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Gender Identity Defined the Purpose
Words: 3232 Length: 9 Document Type: Thesis

Even strong women are feminized in the media and in advertising. Burton Nelson notes, "In a Sears commercial, Olympic basketball players apply lipstick, paint their toenails, rock babies, lounge in bed, and pose and dance in their underwear" (Nelson Burton 442). These are all very feminine characteristics, and women feel they must be feminine not only to fit in society but also to catch a man, and that is

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now