Special Issue Short Essays
Vol. 5 No. 2 (2024): Narrative, Environment, Social Justice
Localizing the Global in Sylvia Plath's "Fever 103°"
-
Submitted
-
May 16, 2023
-
Published
-
2024-06-18
Abstract
The essay presents a close reading of Sylvia Plath's poem "Fever 103°" and argues that Plath's construction of her speaker's vulnerable self facilitates a breakdown of the boundaries between the embodied self and its socio-cultural environment. The argument is built on recent scholarship on Plath's work that views it in the context of the global political movements of her time. By examining the ways in which Plath's use of Cold War discourses shapes her construction of vulnerability, the essay shows how this construction produces the embodied self as deeply entangled with global political movements manifesting in and through the embodied self. By evoking and concurrently undermining the "poetics of hygiene," the poem suggests that any attempt to ascertain a state of utmost purity, of clearly delineated bodily and cultural boundaries, can only end in annihilation. It is in this sense that Plath's representation of her speaker's vulnerable self allows her to develop an astute perspective on the interconnectedness of the private, the national, and the global socio-political environment. In this way, the poet's construction of a vulnerable self represents an understanding of a globally interconnected world that poses localized dangers of
(self-)destruction.
References
- Axelrod, Steven Gould. "The Poetry of Sylvia Plath." The Cambridge Companion to Sylvia Plath, edited by Jo Gill, Cambridge UP, 2006, pp. 177–213.
- Bundtzen, Lynda K. "Historical and Cultural Background for Sylvia Plath's Poems." Critical Insights: Sylvia Plath, edited by William K. Buckley, Salem P, 2013, pp. 33–53.
- Ciobanu, Elena. "From Sylvia Plath's Poetry: The Metamorphoses of the Poetic Self." Plath Profiles, vol. 12, 2012, pp. 213–18.
- Clark, Heather. "P(l)athography: Plath and Her Biographers." Plath in Context, edited by Tracy Brain, Cambridge UP, 2019, pp. 360–70.
- Didlake, Ralph. "Terms of Art: Plath, the Medical Lexicon, and the Human Body in Health and Disease." Critical Insights: Sylvia Plath, edited by William K. Buckley, Salem P, 2013, pp. 258–72.
- Gilson, Erinn. "Vulnerability, Ignorance, and Oppression." Hypatia, vol. 26, no. 2, 2011, pp. 308–32, https://www.jstor.org/stable/23016548.
- Morse, Donald E. "Sylvia Plath and the Trope of Vulnerability." Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS), vol. 6, no. 2, 2000, pp. 77–90.
- Peel, Robin. Writing Back: Sylvia Plath and Cold War Politics. Rosemont Publishing and Printing Corp, 2002.
- Perry, Laura. "Plath and the Culture of Hygiene." Plath in Context, edited by Tracy Brain, Cambridge UP, 2019, pp. 191–200.
- Plath, Sylvia. "Fever 103°." Ariel: The Restored Edition. Faber and Faber, 2005.
- Plath, Sylvia. "Context." Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams: Short Stories, Prose, and Diary Excerpts. Harper and Row Publishers, 1983, pp. 64–65.
- Smith, Geoffrey S. "National Security and Personal Isolation: Sex, Gender, Disease in the Cold War United States." The International History Review, vol. 14, no. 2, 1992, pp. 307–37, https://www.jstor.org/stable/40792749.
- Wayson, Kary. "Sylvia Plath: ‘Fever 103°': The Incinerating Vision of this Plath Classic." Poetry Foundation, 14 Aug. 2007, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/68911/sylvia-plath-fever-103.