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Showing posts from February, 2010

Frieda Hughes on BBC Radio 3

For those able to listen to BBC Radio 3 , Frieda Hughes , the daughter of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, will be the guest of Michael Berkeley's Private Passions , Sunday 28 February 2010 at noon. Thanks to Gail Crowther for bring this to our attention.

Coming Soon: The Spoken Word: Sylvia Plath

Look for a new CD, The Spoken Word: Sylvia Plath , published by the British Library, on 14 April 2010. Advanced orders will be accepted via the British Library's website in mid-March. Readers of this blog will be eligible for a 10% discount; look for an update here about that, also in mid-March. This is a major publication and one that will mean incredibly much to the readers of this blog. For those unfamiliar, the Spoken Word is a series by the British Library, taken from their own Sound Archives as well as from the BBC's . Of interest possibly are the two, double CD's of Ted Hughes . Other poets included in the series are Edith Sitwell , W. H. Auden, and Stevie Smith, to name but a few. Each CD in the series has an introductory essay in the booklet, which also lists the tracks, recording dates, series, etc. I'll continue below, but please read the advanced notice announcement: "Sylvia Plath is widely regarded as one of the most influential poets and authors of t

The Girl Who Wanted to be God

Laurel Green of the Australian Stage recently reviewed Sylvia Plath: The Girl Who Wanted to be God , a stage production "using Plath's poems, diaries, and letters to her mother" written by Karen Corbett, Rosemary Johns, and Brenda Palmer. The review was posted on the 19th, and the performances ended on the 20th. Doesn't make much sense to me either. This work seems contrived from other dramatic adaptations, written in the 1970s, by Barry Kyle and Rose Leiman Goldemburg . I'd love to read the script to be able to judge for myself, but as Laurel Green concludes her review, thing kind of interpretation "merely reminded me [Green] to return to the page, as Plath's words are the closest we can get to her self." This isn't the first time around the block for the production. Here is a link to a review in 2002 written by Helen Thomson of The Age .

To-whit-to-whoo

Sylvia Plath wrote "The Bed Book" in the spring of 1959. By June of that year she was actively marketing it; but in her lifetime it never came to be printed. In 1976, both Faber and Harper & Row brought out editions in the UK , illustrated by Quentin Blake and in the US , with illustrations by Emily Arnold McCully. While not included in any bibliography to date, excerpts of "The Bed Book" were printed in two American periodicals in 1976. In October 1976, Woman's Day published it. Though excerpted, there are some textual variations, mostly to do with stanza structure, capitalization, etc. This publications includes beautiful color illustrations by Sal Murdocca. It appears on pages 98-99. In December, Cricket , a magazine for children, printed 'Beds'. Like the above, it is excerpted and there are textual variations. This publication includes black and white illustrations by Emily McCully, on pages 32-38. The illustrations are the same as

Sylvia Plath: Did you know...

The Nation published Plath's poem "Temper of Time" in their 6 August, 1955. Did you know...This has the distinction of being the first and only known publication by 'Silvia Plath'. Well, the table of contents lists it as such, under the poem on page 119 her name is spelled correctly. This was Plath's first publication with The Nation . She went on to see "Frog Autumn" ( January 24, 1959) , "Departure" ( March 7, 1959 ), and "Two Views of a Cadaver Room" ( January 30, 1960 ) also published there.

Links etc - week beginning 14 February 2010

Grace Schulman's recent First loves and other adventures is now available from University of Michigan Press series Poets on poetry. In Schulman's book is the chapter "Plath and Yaddo". This title was published on January 15, 2010. University of Michigan Press also brought us the incomparable The Unraveling Archive: Essays on Sylvia Plath edited by Anita Helle. Plath's library on LibraryThing is slowly growing. It is now exceeds 500 books. The Helm Fellowship to Indiana University is massively responsible for this growth. I have dozens of pages of titles left to add, so please bear with me. I'll add further posts at random milestones. Later... On second notice, it appears that Schulman's "Plath and Yaddo" is reprinted. It appeared also in Paul Alexander's Ariel Ascending: Writings about Sylvia Plath (1985). So, not the new publication I was hoping it would be.

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackboard

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackboard I. You do not do, you do not do II. Do you not do, do you not do III. Not do you do, Not do you do IV. Do not do you, do not do you V. Do not you do, do not you do VI. Do do not you, do do not you VII. Not you do do, not you do do VIII. Do do do do, not you not you IX. daddy, In the picture I have of you X. Of you, I have in the picture daddy XI. I have you, daddy in the picture of XII. The picture in you, I have of daddy XIII. In daddy, I have the picture of you

Plath & Hughes & Newman

In the current issue of Hotel Amerika (Columbia College, Chicago) poet Amy Newman has two poems of interest to Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes readers. The poems appear on pages 102-103. Her poems "The Hanging Man/The Tender Place" and "Fever/Fever 103" both borrow lines from Plath and Hughes' poems. The structure of each poem is line(s) of Plath, line(s) of Hughes, line(s) of Newman. She enters into the conversation in a very clever, original way. It is certainly one of the more successful examples in this genre where Plath (and Hughes) become the subject of the poem. For more on Newman, see her website . At the time of writing, Hotel Amerika 's website was down and no other referral information could be found.

Links, reviews, etc. - week ending 6 February 2010

Slow week... The American Museum of Natural History in New York City is hosting a launch party for Bright Wings: An Illustrated Anthology of Poems about Birds on Wednesday, March 10, 6:30 pm, at the Kaufmann Theater, first floor - Enter at 77th Street. Ticket prices are $15 adults, $13.50 Members, students, seniors . The anthology features "Pheasant" by Sylvia Plath. Illustrations were done by David Allen Sibley. Shelia Griffin Llanas' Contemporary American Poetry-"Not the End, But the Beginning" features a chapter on Plath. This is published by Enslow Publishers. -- Unrelated - does anyone out there have the text of the poem "Sonnet: To a Dissembling Spring" handy? Copies exist at the collection at Indiana and within the Edward Butscher papers at Smith.

Dispersed into the Machinery: Review of Confessing Cultures: Politics and the Self in the Poetry of Sylvia Plath

Let me get this out of the way first. Anybody that calls David Holbrook "debilitatingly opaque" deserves our admiration. (x) In Confessing Cultures: Politics and the Self in the Poetry of Sylvia Plath , Lisa Narbeshuber sees the poetry of Plath "working through in detail the geography of post-war society. Talking culture as machine, [Plath] traces the lines of production of mechanical brides and grooms, underscoring oppressions and looking for openings." (x) She does this by first challenging Robert Phillips inclusion of Plath amongst the Confessional Poets. The main difference between Plath and these poets such as Robert Lowell, Anne Sexton, and John Berryman is that Plath's "persona often fuses and disappears into her surroundings." (ix) This is in direct contrast to Lowell, Sexton, and Berryman whose poetry more consistently "document[s] the poet's soul." (xii) For Narbeshuber, "Plath sustains the alien moment."