“I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France

This article will use a wide range of material to understand Sylvia Plath’s rich relationship with French culture, from her short stories to her articles for magazines, to her and Ted Hughes’s poems about France. Over the course of a year, Plath took no fewer than four trips to the French capital. P...

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Main Author: Julie IRIGARAY
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2023-12-01
Series:E-REA
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/17179
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author Julie IRIGARAY
author_facet Julie IRIGARAY
author_sort Julie IRIGARAY
collection DOAJ
description This article will use a wide range of material to understand Sylvia Plath’s rich relationship with French culture, from her short stories to her articles for magazines, to her and Ted Hughes’s poems about France. Over the course of a year, Plath took no fewer than four trips to the French capital. Previous publications almost exclusively focused on Plath’s time in Paris (Dave Haslam 2020), but she explored other parts of France and deeply engaged with French culture, so much so that she had planned to move to this country at some stage. Plath travelled to regions as diverse as Brittany and Dordogne, northern France and the Côte d’Azur, and Normandy. Almost all these places inspired a text (“Finisterre”, “Stars Over the Dordogne”, “Berck-Plage”, “The Matisse Chapel”). Plath’s passion for France found its expression in her passion for the arts, from cinema to painting, and of course literature. Her reading of French literature has been widely overlooked by scholars, despite the fact that a poem like “Pursuit” directly quotes Jean Racine. This paper seeks to rectify this by analysing Plath’s French literature books held in her archives.
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spelling doaj-art-0da6662cb6d342d4947cd4cc66f74bf82025-08-20T02:27:14ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182023-12-0121110.4000/erea.17179“I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and FranceJulie IRIGARAYThis article will use a wide range of material to understand Sylvia Plath’s rich relationship with French culture, from her short stories to her articles for magazines, to her and Ted Hughes’s poems about France. Over the course of a year, Plath took no fewer than four trips to the French capital. Previous publications almost exclusively focused on Plath’s time in Paris (Dave Haslam 2020), but she explored other parts of France and deeply engaged with French culture, so much so that she had planned to move to this country at some stage. Plath travelled to regions as diverse as Brittany and Dordogne, northern France and the Côte d’Azur, and Normandy. Almost all these places inspired a text (“Finisterre”, “Stars Over the Dordogne”, “Berck-Plage”, “The Matisse Chapel”). Plath’s passion for France found its expression in her passion for the arts, from cinema to painting, and of course literature. Her reading of French literature has been widely overlooked by scholars, despite the fact that a poem like “Pursuit” directly quotes Jean Racine. This paper seeks to rectify this by analysing Plath’s French literature books held in her archives.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/17179Sylvia PlathFranceFrench literatureJean RacinePierre de RonsardArthur Rimbaud
spellingShingle Julie IRIGARAY
“I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France
E-REA
Sylvia Plath
France
French literature
Jean Racine
Pierre de Ronsard
Arthur Rimbaud
title “I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France
title_full “I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France
title_fullStr “I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France
title_full_unstemmed “I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France
title_short “I felt I’d come home”: Sylvia Plath and France
title_sort i felt i d come home sylvia plath and france
topic Sylvia Plath
France
French literature
Jean Racine
Pierre de Ronsard
Arthur Rimbaud
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/17179
work_keys_str_mv AT julieirigaray ifeltidcomehomesylviaplathandfrance