Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Otto_PlathOtto Plath - Wikipedia

    Otto Emil Plath (April 13, 1885 – November 5, 1940) was a German-American writer, academic, and biologist. Plath worked as a professor of biology and German language at Boston University and as an entomologist, with a specific expertise on bumblebees. He was the father of American poet Sylvia Plath and Warren Plath, and the husband ...

  2. El artículo analiza cómo la muerte de Otto Emil Plath, entomólogo y profesor de biología, influyó en la vida y la obra de su hija Sylvia Plath. Se citan algunos poemas de la autora que reflejan su relación con su padre y su culpa por su trágico final.

  3. 9 de feb. de 2024 · El 27 de octubre de 1932 nació en Boston una de las poetas más importantes de la literatura estadounidense: Sylvia Plath. A través de su escritura profunda, sufrida e incluso oscura, Plath le hablaría al mundo sobre el dolor y la enfermedad mental, convirtiéndose así en una de las mayores exponentes del género confesional.

  4. 30 de ago. de 2018 · How did Otto Plath, a German immigrant and academic, influence his daughter Sylvia's life and poetry? Mark Anspach, an anthropologist, explores the role of Otto's death, his sadism, and his example in Sylvia's repeated attempts to end her own life.

  5. Explore how Plath's father, a prominent entomologist, influenced her life and work through his absence and presence. Read her poems that express her love, anger, fear, and resentment towards him.

  6. 20 de ago. de 2012 · By Harriet Staff. Bookforum' s Paper Trail alerts us to this news: Newly released FBI files on Sylvia Plaths father, Otto, corroborate Plaths pro-Nazi characterization of him in her 1958 poem, “Daddy” ("Panzer-man, panzer-man, O You— / Not God but a swastika”) by describing him as “pro-German” with a “morbid ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Daddy_(poem)Daddy (poem) - Wikipedia

    "Daddy" employs controversial metaphors of the Holocaust to explore Plath's complex relationship with her father, Otto Plath, who died shortly after her eighth birthday as a result of undiagnosed diabetes. The poem itself is cryptic; its implications and thematic concerns have been analyzed academically, with many differing conclusions.