The Poetry of Sylvia Plath: Crash Course Literature 216

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2014
  • In which John Green teaches you about the poetry of Sylvia Plath. When a lot of people think about Sylvia Plath, they think about her struggles with mental illness and her eventual suicide. Her actual work can get lost in the shuffle a bit, so this video really tries to focus on the poetry. You'll learn about Sylvia Plath's role as a feminist poet, and you'll also learn about her extraordinary ability to recreate the experiences of real life in a beautiful and relatable way.
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @Yankeesiheart
    @Yankeesiheart Před 5 lety +3940

    Sylvia Plath didn't glamorize mental illness, she wrote about her experiences beautifully. There's a difference between glamorizing something and writing about an issue poetically.

  • @erinliebig4893
    @erinliebig4893 Před 4 lety +1214

    Even if she is poetry for just teenage girls, why do we discredit things liked by teenage girls? They are people.... and a MASSIVE demographic. I hate that things are so often discredited as soon they become popular among teenage girls.

  • @BrandorKOB
    @BrandorKOB Před 10 lety +2527

    I may get shit for this, but I feel like John Green is the patron saint of sad teenage girls.

    • @24dramafreak
      @24dramafreak Před 10 lety +136

      those of us that are happy are quite fond of him too.

    • @nadiact-ie5hy
      @nadiact-ie5hy Před 10 lety +40

      I'm not a teenage girl, and I like and respect him.

    • @meghans9909
      @meghans9909 Před 10 lety +36

      I am a fairly happy teenager girl who is quite fond of John, although his writing does make me quite sad at times.

    • @jessubravante9957
      @jessubravante9957 Před 5 lety +25

      As a sad teenager in the past, i felt blessed by John Green xD

    • @stephlu9684
      @stephlu9684 Před 5 lety +15

      So girls have a man ally, what is wrong with that ! You need a village to raise a boy AND a GIRL ! We matter, our sensitivity makes us weak if misused and makes us great when we work with it, some men understand and want to raise us higher !

  • @katculbertson2444
    @katculbertson2444 Před 10 lety +1330

    My dad says he doesn't like that I read Sylvia Plath, since I've also dealt with depression, self-injury, and suicide attempts. But her poetry doesn't promote those activities; it simply explores them. Having my same morbid feelings and thought processes thrown back at me by Plath's work is one of the most healing processes I've experienced.

    • @mashaalsajid959
      @mashaalsajid959 Před 4 lety +42

      Everytime I hit rockbottom reading plath's poetry and Kurt cobain's journals are one of the things that really help me

  • @TheOnceandFutureGeek
    @TheOnceandFutureGeek Před 10 lety +2348

    Some additional info on Plath's posthumous reception and her struggle with male oppression in her work: the original manuscript for Ariel was completed and ready for publication before she died, and Plath left it with the intent that it should be published as she had formed it. However, it was discovered by her ex-husband, who decided to edit it, rearrange it, and remove poems that cast him in a bad light (their marriage was far from a happy one, even before his affairs). The way it was rearranged also changed the tone of the whole book from one of tentative hope for life at the end to one that seemed to confirm the hopelessness that drove her to suicide. THAT is the version of Ariel that almost everyone knew for years after her death, and the one that is still found most often in libraries and schools today. It's only in recent years that the original version of Ariel has come into print, and the difference between the two is really amazing. Even in death, Plath struggled to escape the control of men in her life who would censor her words and het work. I'm not saying this as hate on men, but considering the running theme of oppression and struggle for autonomy in her poetry, I think this is an important aspect of the culture that surrounded her, even after death, and it should be acknowledged.

    • @skittlehappymatt
      @skittlehappymatt Před 9 lety +91

      AND, Ariel was originally to be titled Daddy, after of course her famous controversial poem "Daddy", but she decided against it.

    • @MegaDrummerboy16
      @MegaDrummerboy16 Před 6 lety +228

      +esotericoccultist
      Thank you for letting everyone know what a women hater YOU are.

    • @crstph
      @crstph Před 4 lety +112

      @@EsotericOccultist "since they cant compete fairly" the picture you paint of women is reductive and false but even assuming it were true what would your solution be?? to lay down and die?? op is talking about men silencing plath and twisting her legacy to their satisfaction but you're more concerned about women "leeching off of men"

    • @carolradovich7906
      @carolradovich7906 Před 4 lety +6

      Wow. Interesting information and insight!

    • @salome1075
      @salome1075 Před 4 lety +13

      MegaDrummerboy16 Right. i see misogyny

  • @meghans9909
    @meghans9909 Před 10 lety +993

    As a teenage girl, I fall into the stereotype of loving Sylvia Plath's poetry.

    • @EsotericOccultist
      @EsotericOccultist Před 6 lety

      Meghan S So basically you're not unique in any way.

    • @seikshin
      @seikshin Před 5 lety +97

      EsotericOccultist Do you really hate women?

    • @griffinfenton2603
      @griffinfenton2603 Před 5 lety +145

      there’s nothing wrong with being a teenage girl and liking stuff.

    • @aphrog649
      @aphrog649 Před 5 lety +39

      Hey, there’s worse stereotypes to fall into! That being said, don’t like/dislike something just because people think you should/shouldn’t be into it.
      sincerely,
      another teenage girl

    • @andrealong4948
      @andrealong4948 Před 4 lety +26

      Meghan S I assume you’re no longer a teenage girl and are now a young woman. I still have a profound and deep love for her. Do you still feel the same way? Have you expanded? I’d love to hear back about this.

  • @peachmuffin143
    @peachmuffin143 Před 9 lety +1751

    As a young adult who struggles with depression, I have a fondness for Sylvia's work. To dismiss her simply because you've never experienced the crippling debilitation depression causes, is ignorant, insulting and lazy. Judge her as an "emo of her generation" or however you like, but she was honest, obviously in pain, yet she released that torment into striking words that have resonated with millions of people for over fifty years. Not an easy thing to do when you feel dead inside.
    So, critics, what have you done lately?

    • @Redorgreenful
      @Redorgreenful Před 6 lety +69

      Alexandra Meininger It's true. But there's also underlying misogyny. Ted Hughes abused Plath (noted in her own writings). There's a protective attitude that literary circles have for Hughes (esp. in Britain) & unfortunately it's shaped our perception of her as a little girl or superficial. Some of the book covers for her works show a woman putting on makeup or a photo of her when she was blonde & in a swimsuit.

    • @sirmarisa
      @sirmarisa Před 5 lety +4

      I hope you will be cured of depression. And I'm sorry if i would offend you to say this, but i think it is a fitting brutal footnote for a brutally beautiful poet

    • @arandomcomment1092
      @arandomcomment1092 Před 4 lety +1

      @SHELBY KRIEWALD eew. Hehehe? Qwucks?

    • @fahad561
      @fahad561 Před 4 lety +3

      This is me 4-years later telling you that you are absolutely spot-on!

    • @kadesjunkdrawer2233
      @kadesjunkdrawer2233 Před 4 lety

      Redcatrobe you sound angey

  • @adelagajic5560
    @adelagajic5560 Před 9 lety +2651

    Dear John Green,
    please give us more of Crash Course Literature.
    Best wishes,
    every Crash Course Literature viewer ever

    • @kharris3352
      @kharris3352 Před 9 lety +21

      I'd very much agree with that statement.
      Best Wishes
      Me who has read this comment.

    • @iquegrey76
      @iquegrey76 Před 9 lety +8

      Nikki Noir I support this statement as well.

    • @sarahnoorda972
      @sarahnoorda972 Před 9 lety +8

      Yes please! They help so much!

    • @Noxshus
      @Noxshus Před 8 lety +12

      Nikki Noir CC:L totally reshaped Frankenstein for me. Lit grad, and we didn't talk about half of the backstory that you used to shade all that perspective.
      We don't need this for some kind of cliff notes, we want this for new and interesting ideas about classics. PLEASE do more Crash Course Literature.

    • @faelikheise7310
      @faelikheise7310 Před 7 lety +2

      Pleaseeeeeeeee

  • @eternalmiasma5586
    @eternalmiasma5586 Před 4 lety +538

    John green: “isn’t she like know mainly by young emo girls?”
    Also John green: literally is mainly read by young girls

    • @rohanz2678
      @rohanz2678 Před 4 lety

      Schwer Dunkel and I didn’t ask

    • @didakusyova
      @didakusyova Před 4 lety +22

      @@rohanz2678 why so edgy

    • @rohanz2678
      @rohanz2678 Před 4 lety +2

      Diana K I don’t think you have a good grasp on what edgy means, just saying

  • @ruoweilim7334
    @ruoweilim7334 Před 6 lety +649

    LET'S TRY TO READ SOME POEMS BEFORE CONVINCING EVERYONE ABOUT HOW SMART WE ARE HA the epidemic

  • @mx.acacia
    @mx.acacia Před 8 lety +555

    The "I am enormous" is probably not a feminist statement (at least not only). Sylvia Plath was Bipolar. She wasn't allowing herself to become enormous with happiness, she was being over taken by it. A feeling of being enormous is one of the most tell tale signs of a Bipolar Manic episode. Her writing of feeling stupidly happy is also in line with a Manic episode. While in a Mania many will often feel so happy that you experience yourself as indestructable and because of that you - to use her own word - act stupidly. Sylvia Plaths Bipolar disorder is the reason for her writing so much and being so active so close to her suicide. As John says she saw herself as living in two extremes, periods of extreme highs and of extreme lows. This is how Bipolar works. You have Manic episodes and Depressive episodes and a kind if lull or stable period inbetween where you flatten out while 'switching' between the episodes (The length and intensity of the stages vary). Sylvia Plath was most likely triggerd by her separation and went into a Manic episode. For people with Bipolar it is when coming down from a Manic episode and entering a Depressive one, or when starting to come up from a depressive episode that you are most likely to attempt or commit suicide. Sylvia was on the way down from a Manic episode and the reality of her situation very likely only made the depression she was entering worse. It is very likely that that is the reason for her tragic and preventable suicide. So while it is very possible and not wrong to read the "enormous" and "stupidly happy" as an act of social rebellion against female oppression, I dont think it is - at least not fully. It os more likely her explanation of the feeling you have while being Manic with happiness due to her Bipolar depression.

    • @luxmberg5434
      @luxmberg5434 Před 7 lety +25

      No it is thought she was bipolar, it is not a fact.

    • @MissJRR13
      @MissJRR13 Před 6 lety +38

      Yavex I mean, it is pretty clear to me (and I am bipolar). I've never felt more understood by anyone than while reading her

    • @brendano3735
      @brendano3735 Před 6 lety +30

      Well I don’t think we’ll ever truly know since doctors back then thought that the solution to everyone’s psychological problems was jolting them with electricity. Sylvia being one of these people, I’m certain there was no tests actually done to prove this theory. However, everyone has highs and lows. Bipolar people’s are just higher highs and lower lows

    • @touisbetterthanpi
      @touisbetterthanpi Před 6 lety +13

      Kreaper MLG i agree with you, but I feel like whatever the source, that poem is pretty against the gender roles of the time. Publishing that poem, being proud of that pome, could be considered feminist, even inadvertently

    • @MegaDrummerboy16
      @MegaDrummerboy16 Před 6 lety +1

      Brendan O
      Well said

  • @siegeperilous
    @siegeperilous Před 10 lety +327

    I did my Senior Thesis on Plath & was delighted to see Crash Course's excellent video on her work.
    It is dismaying that many write-off Plath as an emo, suicide poet when her work is, in actuality, very complex, rife with symbolism.
    Much of this misconception is due to Ted Hughes' reordering of the poems in Plath's last book, Ariel. He omits poems, such as "Purdah" which ends on a note of female empowerment (Clytemnestra slaying Agamemnon), and adds, as the penultimate poem, "Edge", which begins "The woman is perfected/Her dead//Body wears the smile of accomplishment."
    Plath's original ordering would have ended with her cycle of bee poems, culminating in "Wintering" in which the dormant bees re-emerge from their hive after winter, "The bees are flying. They taste the Spring."
    Plath was a poet of rebirth, not death. That's where she's misunderstood. Note the phoenix symbolism Green quotes from "Lady Lazarus", "Out of the ash/I rise with my red hair/And I eat men like air." Rebirth. Empowerment.

  • @yoekt
    @yoekt Před 8 lety +818

    "See you next week"
    Two years later and I'm still waiting. WHERE ARE YOU?!

    • @alannar.8701
      @alannar.8701 Před 8 lety +2

      This summer!

    • @yoekt
      @yoekt Před 8 lety

      WAIT REALLY? HOW DO YOU KNOW?

    • @alannar.8701
      @alannar.8701 Před 8 lety +4

      Shadow63 They've talked about it in lots of places, can't think of anywhere particularly. I'm super excited!

    • @yoekt
      @yoekt Před 8 lety

      Oh thanks for telling me ^.^

    • @alannar.8701
      @alannar.8701 Před 8 lety

      No problem!

  • @elliart7432
    @elliart7432 Před 4 lety +103

    Vincent Van Gogh made his best work when he was in moments of recovery, people need to stop twisting the “depressed genius artist” stereotype in general. Artists create beautiful things *in spite* of mental illness, not because of it.

  • @kathxcake
    @kathxcake Před 9 lety +388

    I sort of wish you would have dove a little deeper into the abusive relationship Sylvia held with her father and explained one of her last poems "Daddy." Personally, I think it's her best work and I was disjointed in not seeing it so much as mentioned.

    • @leejay1101
      @leejay1101 Před 5 lety +9

      katherine m her dad died when she was young do you mean the abuse from Ted Hughes?

    • @Alice-sh1qy
      @Alice-sh1qy Před 5 lety +2

      katherine m Daddy is my favorite poem by her

    • @maxalberts85
      @maxalberts85 Před 4 lety +1

      I think you mean disappointed. God help us if you're a fan of her poetry.

  • @the.bloodless.one1312
    @the.bloodless.one1312 Před 8 lety +101

    Plath's "romanticizing" of death and self-injury, and the manner in which she expresses them, is exactly why her poetry has helped me cope with my own mental illnesses and comforted me in times when I felt so determined to take my own life.
    Great vid btw!

    • @zingzach
      @zingzach Před 8 lety +18

      +samusaran311 exactly. This guy doesn't get it because he doesn't relate to it. This is what makes Plath's poetry so powerful, and it should not be criticized, no matter how uncomfortable it makes the reader. In fact, this video was extremely underwhelming. Great poetry is rarely happy.

    • @tn4234
      @tn4234 Před 4 lety +4

      @@zingzach no, you dont get it, just because you feel better consuming content that talks about mental illness, depression, self harm etc. Doesnt mean everyone has the same response to it as you, i dont have it for example, it doesnt make me feel better, it triggers anxiety. It's clear that people have many different reactions to susceptive content.

    • @tn4234
      @tn4234 Před 4 lety

      @Kawi yes i know, sorry if i mixed them up.

  • @turkoizdog
    @turkoizdog Před 10 lety +125

    Regarding the ups and downs, it is a common theory and Sylvia Plath was bipolar, and these ups were her manic phases. It is also thought that her sudden burst of creativity came from a manic phase, since mania tends to beget creative productivity, when channeled right, at least.

    • @Sindizwe
      @Sindizwe Před 10 lety +10

      Yeah, her depressive phases and periods of massive creative production certainly fits the typical rhythm of bipolar disorder

    • @aejlindvall
      @aejlindvall Před 10 lety +2

      When I've read about the period of her writing at least Ariel, I've always seen it as a mixed episode. But that's just me.

    • @mimiklaranathalie
      @mimiklaranathalie Před 10 lety

      Bipolar isn't a real disease.

    • @aejlindvall
      @aejlindvall Před 10 lety +9

      mimiklaranathalie And you facts supporting that idea are?

  • @TheTophat22
    @TheTophat22 Před 10 lety +77

    I want to give Plath a hug...

  • @yyrael
    @yyrael Před 10 lety +102

    As a fairly enthusiastic Plath fangirl, I was equal parts excited and wary when I clicked on this--wary because so many people reduce her to just a depressive, tragic poet. It's frustrating to see such a brilliant and impassioned writer so often dismissed because of that.
    I'd have to say my favorite piece of hers is "The Rabbit Catcher," which is utterly heartbreaking and powerful in the context of her life.
    "And we, too, had a relationship--
    Tight wires between us,
    Pegs too deep to uproot, and a mind like a ring
    Sliding shut on some quick thing,
    The constriction killing me also."

  • @boobertthescoopert
    @boobertthescoopert Před 7 lety +10

    Reading The Bell Jar is so emotionally exhausting. Like...Its unbelievably relatable in the things she talks about, but it is so obvious that she is wildly depressed. She wants to die so badly. In the second half of the book, there's just a constant mood of hopelessness and she talks about killing herself quite often. I cried, because I felt so bad for her.

  • @billygoatideas
    @billygoatideas Před 9 lety +112

    I'm surprised her miscarriage isn't mentioned, that was important to many of her subsequent poems

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 Před 9 lety +6

      billygoatideas Sylvia Plath may also have had an abortion. It's been quite a while since I read the book "Her Husband" which is about the marriage of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes but this is my best recollection and you may want to read the whole book which is very good. Shortly before her death Sylvia made a list in her journal of things she had experienced and among them she wrote "abortion" which people have believed was a reference to her miscarriage/spontaneous abortion. Many years later a man (I can't recall his name) who knew Sylvia wrote a memoir and in it told about making a crossing on the R.M.S. Queen Elizabeth and unexpectedly meeting Sylvia on board and I believe she was sailing alone. The author of the memoir was quite clear about when this happened. Plath biographers had had no knowledge of Sylvia Plath returning to America at this time. The author of "Her Husband" brought up the possibility that maybe Sylvia returned to the U.S. to terminate a pregnancy. My recollection is rather vague and I hope I'm not creating misinformation but I recommend the book "Her Husband" for those who may be interested in getting more specific information. Though "Her Husband" is excellent reading the author did make a couple of mistakes: there are a couple of references to Sylvia Plath traveling aboard the Queen Elizabeth 2. Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes also sailed aboard the first Queen Elizabeth; the QE2 began service in 1969, six years after Sylvia Plath died.

    • @abiturner
      @abiturner Před 4 lety +14

      She wrote a poem about her miscarriage called "Parliament hill fields" it's one of my favourite poems. There's a line near the beginning where she says "Nobody can tell what I lack" and although i'm aware she's referring to her unborn child I feel as though everybody can relate to that feeling of emptiness. You should check it out!

  • @daydreamishh
    @daydreamishh Před 5 lety +27

    As an aspiring author and a literature fanatic, it was really heartfelt when Lana sung about relating to her. Sylvia was an amazing, tragic and iconic poet.

  • @balmylagoon
    @balmylagoon Před 10 lety +96

    John Green, I think you would be an absolutely amazing professor. I'm dead serious. You are brilliant with literature, you make me fall in love with it over and over again.

  • @mckenzieshawcroft1470
    @mckenzieshawcroft1470 Před 8 lety +60

    I think the "What a thrill" line applies more to the fact that she hates domestic work (cutting onions) and for once, to do something other (cut her finger instead) is compelling, even if it is self-harm.

  • @KnightedDawn
    @KnightedDawn Před 10 lety +67

    Ancient Aztec poetry (written by Nazahualcoyotl, the king of Texcoco):
    All the world is a tomb from which nothing escapes,
    Nothing is so perfect that it does not fall and disappear...
    What was yesterday, today is no more,
    And what lives today cannot hope to exist tomorrow.
    I, Nezahualcoyotl, ask this:
    Is it true one really lives on the earth?
    Not forever on earth,
    Only a little while here.
    Though it be jade it falls apart,
    Though it be gold it wears away,
    Though it be quetzal plumage it is torn asunder.
    Not forever on earth,
    Only a little while here.
    (excerpted from "Native Mesoamerican Spirituality")

  • @MsStaceysclass
    @MsStaceysclass Před 6 lety +17

    I'm reading Plath's The Colossus and Other Poems, and it's so intensely visual that reading it is like going to an art museum. I love it and feel dazed.

  • @PiquoPie
    @PiquoPie Před 9 lety +27

    It sounds like she is not only suffering from some sort of Bi-polar Disorder but describes it in great detail. When she is down she describes the explosions, something she longs both longs for and finds intimidating. She is motivated to feel as she once did and yet when she is up it almost feels as if there is to much, as if she is excessively drained and both happy and productive and yet not necessarily of her own volition.
    And to someone with dramatic ups and down death and suicide doesn't seem like a permanent solution to a temporary problem but a permanent solution for a endlessly revolving door of depression and uncontrollable energy,

  • @OurHourglass
    @OurHourglass Před 8 lety +309

    "See you next week," he lied.

  • @claudekennedy7855
    @claudekennedy7855 Před 8 lety +18

    It's great that you put that little excerpt about suicide in there. So many teenagers watch this, its really awesome that youre using your power as an educator for good, and for more than just shoving facts in our heads.

  • @MollyKillers
    @MollyKillers Před 10 lety +4

    I am so glad you did her. I have recently become obsessed with her, and I love how you discussed her in such a wonderful way not putting her down for her death poetry but just putting it as it was. Thanks Crash Course!

  • @glitcharcing
    @glitcharcing Před 11 měsíci +2

    Remember seeing this when I was a teenager myself. Looking back, the way you addressed this topic means the world to me - with such awareness and tact.

  • @calcrespi545
    @calcrespi545 Před 8 lety +13

    I really love this series. I'm a science major in college and I don't get to take literature classes, and am confined to my room most days, so getting to read and analyze great novels with you, one of my favorite authors, gives me the greatest joy. It would make me, and I'm sure a lot of other people, very happy if you would continue with this series.
    Best,
    Cal

    • @hughmck7734
      @hughmck7734 Před 8 lety +1

      I'm the same situation- I don't get to literature classes- so this is really useful because they talk about great books and speak about them in a way that I can relate their content to my own life.

  • @michaelroyames
    @michaelroyames Před 9 lety +6

    Dear John and all the CC team:
    For a glorious couple of weeks I have enjoyed Crash Course Literature along with my morning coffee. For those few short minutes my life experience was lifted beyond the ordinary because of your efforts. I assure you that this subject matter is warmly appreciated. Thank you. Make more!

  • @sarahannspivey5667
    @sarahannspivey5667 Před rokem +3

    my therapist suggested i read sylvia plath and i began to write again. it is not glamorous, depression. but, you have to admit, there is a certain stubborn beauty about it that causes you to cringe.

  • @bpeterson1559
    @bpeterson1559 Před 4 lety +1

    3:51 to 4:49
    Why do I need to come back and listen to this so often?
    I suppose I'm glad I am able to come back,
    glad it was written in the first place.
    Thank you, John.

  • @MaebhyHowell
    @MaebhyHowell Před 9 lety +16

    I recently finished reading The Bell Jar today and I really enjoyed. Not much happened in the plot (not very much anyway) but I couldn't put the book down and every time I did manage to draw my eyes away from the page, I couldn't stop thinking about the story and Esther's problems. The book was easy to read and understand yet it did move me and I would happily re read it :) I'd love to get hold of some of her poems now...

  • @Sartori
    @Sartori Před 9 lety +33

    Also... in the midst of depression, it's often hard to see a way out, or believe that it will ever get better. And knowing, abstractly, that your life is actually quite nice compared to many people's, and that you really "shouldn't" feel terrible often does not help one feel better at all... in fact, it can make someone feel worse, because it adds in a guilt element to the depression. It's a terrible thing, how a person's mind and emotions can betray them.

    • @burasloungeroom1341
      @burasloungeroom1341 Před 9 lety +2

      Sartori The only way I get through any sadness is thinking about all those who have worse than me. I think in my case, it helps me to realize how lucky I am in ways I cannot see. After reading your comment, I realized that I should never advice this method to anyone as this may add to their guilt. So thanks.

  • @florachan3858
    @florachan3858 Před 9 lety +40

    Dear John Green,
    An analysis of Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go would be amazing.
    Best wishes,
    A diehard crash course fan

  • @voletmoonblaze
    @voletmoonblaze Před 10 lety +2

    Crash Course Literature is so amazing. Every time I watch it I feel myself falling in love with literature even more. The quotes you guys choose are just incredible.

  • @bernadettemendoza8058
    @bernadettemendoza8058 Před 10 lety +2

    IRS puts me on hold for about an hour so far. Thanks God for crash course. I am still willing to live after the morning passed me by,
    Still on hold but glad to had taking crash literature course on the poems of this great woman who left us too early but gave us so much food for though. Mil gracias Silvia!

  • @nadiact-ie5hy
    @nadiact-ie5hy Před 10 lety +5

    I really liked your point towards the end, that we are "called to attentiveness, even when it's painful." That really resonated with me.
    Also, your me-from-the-past discussion seems particularly pertinant considering some of the recent criticism against TFiOS and Looking for Alaska.

  • @valerodriguez8360
    @valerodriguez8360 Před 8 lety +93

    You should talk about THE OUTSIDERS

    • @andymarin6725
      @andymarin6725 Před 8 lety +5

      Yessss. I love Ponyboy's first person technique so much!

    • @dallasmartinfark
      @dallasmartinfark Před 8 lety +2

      My name is Dallas and I've had so many questions asking if that book is where I got my name

  • @nora896
    @nora896 Před 10 lety

    I would like to thank everyone involved in the making for this video for addressing suicide the way you did, and depression, well the whole open letter response. Thank you

  • @whitneyv9484
    @whitneyv9484 Před 5 lety

    I read The Bell Jar a few months ago and I loved it. It was relatable in the way that the way the main character thought about her day to day life, how it all feels distorted and hyper-aware sometimes.

  • @bobbi7011
    @bobbi7011 Před 8 lety +22

    You should do a crash course on Nabokov's works -- namely, Signs and Symbols and Lolita!

  • @sarahpowell6617
    @sarahpowell6617 Před 9 lety +73

    Ooh, I would LOVE a Crash Course Literature on one of the works of Virginia Woolf!

  • @heatherwalton4281
    @heatherwalton4281 Před 9 lety +1

    Oh my goodness I love Sylvia Plath's work. Lady Lazarus is my favorite from her. Her use of enjambment, and repetition blows my mind! Thank you for doing this video!

  • @SuperMasakado
    @SuperMasakado Před 10 lety

    John Green, you are doing a service to the world. I thought your literature videos couldn't compare to the history ones but these are great! Thanks so much for helping me and my students better understand the world in general.

  • @Mattimerson
    @Mattimerson Před 9 lety +60

    I would love it if John did a Crash Course on Animal Farm or 1984 both by George Orwell. Two really cool books.

  • @ErinGaffney4Centuries
    @ErinGaffney4Centuries Před 9 lety +4

    Thank you for the open letter. It's amazing.

  • @LeendaBeks
    @LeendaBeks Před 10 lety +1

    Thank you for the open letter, John. As someone who has read The Bell Jar, written a research paper on it and has dealt with depression firsthand, I applaud you.
    Also the TFIOS movie was great. DFTBA

  • @m0.x136
    @m0.x136 Před 5 lety

    I love that whether I need help with a Sociology course, reviewing for a History test, and now trying to understand poetry for an English research paper, Crash course always has a vid for the subject I need! Thanks CC for helping me not fail since middle school 😅

  • @jh9339
    @jh9339 Před 10 lety +7

    you just opened my mind to an awesome woman, i just became obsessed and want to read her poems and biography now!

  • @JamesPeach
    @JamesPeach Před 8 lety +321

    1984...you should consider analyzing this. Or maybe "The Picture of Dorian Gray" since I'm currently reading it and it's interesting.

    • @JamesPeach
      @JamesPeach Před 8 lety +1

      *****
      I didn't realize you made this suggestion. I'll give it a try, thanks.

    • @benryangarcia
      @benryangarcia Před 8 lety +6

      Maybe Lord of the Flies, Waiting for Godot, or Beowulf too

    • @Codiliabra
      @Codiliabra Před 6 lety +2

      *muhahahaha*

    • @billman.
      @billman. Před 6 lety +7

      you finally got your wish of 1984

    • @samishah3129
      @samishah3129 Před 5 lety

      Me too

  • @vishnu_99
    @vishnu_99 Před 10 lety

    Oh meh glob thank you for this video! We talked about Plath recently in English class before school ended, and her poems are a bit disturbing yet fascinating, and they really capture your attention once you really start to interpret and go in depth in the poem. Thank you!

  • @scotx1307
    @scotx1307 Před 10 lety

    Thank you for covering Sylvia Plath! I'm a 35 year old man and she is one of my favorite poets, such beautiful yet sad and dark imagery. Most teachers I ever had didn't want to cover her work. I really appreciate your interpretations of the various works, very insightful. Her poems can be fairly strange and hard to decipher. Thanks again, fantastic video!

  • @jerrywhite4559
    @jerrywhite4559 Před 9 lety +3

    I deeply enjoy the unique, pseudo-philosophical notion of both talking with the past self, and the way it is done. Such as "Let's actually read some poems before we trying to convince everyone how smart we are." It, intentionally or not, shows the flow of change, evolution of the individual and, in my opinion most important to the series on Literature, how ideals and life style can change through education and study.

  • @LoraHari81
    @LoraHari81 Před 8 lety +5

    What a simplicity of SP's life and poetry.

  • @christianlacosse749
    @christianlacosse749 Před 8 lety

    What is perhaps the most important aspect of these videos (of the Crash Course Literature series) is their introduction of elements into literary discussion which broaden the perception of a potential reader without rounding-out or encapsulating an entire opinion or viewpoint. You are, as such, cracking open a door to a room, within which a curious glow pulls the reader deeper into exploratory thought. Keep it up, you're doing good work!

  • @MeganChristie16
    @MeganChristie16 Před 10 lety

    John is the best. I adore what you have to say, you always give us the info from a few angles.

  • @ShadowDrakken
    @ShadowDrakken Před 10 lety +47

    Thank you for introducing me to the poetry of Sylvia Plath. I can now say from experience, rather than inexperience, that her work is boring, emo, dribble that's promoting self hate and is not worth my time.
    And before anyone jumps me for saying so, you don't have to have the same opinion as me.
    Art doesn't require conformity or agreement. Heck it doesn't even require understanding in many cases. This is but one man's opinion that I alone hold. Hold your own opinion with pride, but do not attempt to deprive me of my own.

    • @FreekinEkin2
      @FreekinEkin2 Před 10 lety +13

      You're more than entitled to your opinion, but it's pointless if you can't back it up. A brief John Green video isn't going to teach you anything worthwhile about her poetry.

    • @ShadowDrakken
      @ShadowDrakken Před 10 lety +11

      Opinions don't require being "backed up". Only facts, or information presented as facts, do.

    • @lifeofanidiot
      @lifeofanidiot Před 10 lety +44

      I'm not certain you paid attention to the video. It does have depressing lows, but it also has joyous happiness.
      And as a critic, opinions SHOULD be backed up.

    • @ShadowDrakken
      @ShadowDrakken Před 10 lety +6

      Objective assessments should be backed up. Opinions need not be. Her work bored me, please do tell, how do you back up the opinion of boredom? You can't, it just is what it is.

    • @lifeofanidiot
      @lifeofanidiot Před 10 lety +15

      You can describe what about her work bored you.

  • @noahlabonteclark803
    @noahlabonteclark803 Před 5 lety +3

    When John says "Her career was cut short, and I mourn all the many wonderful books we could have had"
    I immedeatly thought of a Kendrick Lamar line from 'i' a song about expression/depression "What do you want from me and my scars?"

  • @lionheart9693
    @lionheart9693 Před 6 lety +1

    This is an absolutely spot on, well-written, and humane summation of Plath. Loved it.

  • @lovernumber7
    @lovernumber7 Před 5 lety

    This video is so good I'm saving it to rewatch it. I LOVE how you interpreted her poems and how you question her without loosing the meaning she put in them. Thank you for being such a respectful appreciator. I have only recently found about the life and work of Sylvia Plath, even though my own work is SO much like her but so much less eloquent, off course, I feel hope when I hear about people who appreciate and how they appreciate her, because I always felt no one will enjoy my dark unhopeful poetry.

  • @RealRainbowRapidash
    @RealRainbowRapidash Před 9 lety +57

    John, a Crash Course Literature on Macbeth would be great! :)

    • @awkwardlyyours
      @awkwardlyyours Před 9 lety

      RealRainbowRapidash Agreed

    • @DragonetteEye
      @DragonetteEye Před 9 lety

      JulesLovesCZcams And A Mudsummer Night's Dream!

    • @KingSamurott10
      @KingSamurott10 Před 6 lety +1

      They just released a Macbeth episode yesterday, 1/23/18!

  • @courtneyt972
    @courtneyt972 Před 10 lety +6

    "By keeping her eyes open as long as she did, she helped to keep ours open" Well said sir.

  • @sarahs.2610
    @sarahs.2610 Před 9 lety

    This is so well done! Great job, Crash Course team! I never knew that one could consider line breaks in poetry as a form of punctuation. I always thought of them as an arbitrary thing. This will completely change the way I read poetry from now on!

  • @briannajohnson7298
    @briannajohnson7298 Před 9 lety +2

    Hey John! These are always intensely beautifully written and thought provoking videos. Thank you for doing them, but it would be awesome if you could do even more. I know you're busy, but I hope you know how much students (and non students) everywhere appreciate them in a time when literature is becoming increasingly devalued in society and in schools. Thanks again.

  • @skittlehappymatt
    @skittlehappymatt Před 9 lety +7

    As a major Sylvia Plath fan I don't care much to call her poetry works of feminism but instead her works were adopted by feminism. She came from a time where the women's movement for equality was at full force and feminism was this new big thing, and generally feminists care for women who've lead horrid, battered lives whether it be physical or mental, and Sylvia's writing was just that, battered, and it all came from a bright and brilliant woman. They saw this in her and took her after her death under their wing. Sylvia wrote just to express her thoughts about everything around and inside her, her mind's eye never blinked.

  • @torqueshock7236
    @torqueshock7236 Před 5 lety +3

    I've heard her reading her own poetry. And honestly I thought that when I was listening to her I could hear in her voice not only the genius, but also the madness.

  • @callmenemo8945
    @callmenemo8945 Před 10 lety

    started studying poetry in literature and looked at one of her poems today, this is very useful! thanks John!

  • @ErinGaffney4Centuries
    @ErinGaffney4Centuries Před 9 lety

    Thank you for not forgetting to be awesome and being so honest with Plath's writing. Loved the video!

  • @BilboB
    @BilboB Před 8 lety +13

    More literature courses!!!!!!!

  • @kaitlyncarroll3314
    @kaitlyncarroll3314 Před 8 lety +4

    Will there be more Crash Course Literature videos because they are my favorite videos on Crash Course.

  • @danabalanza2167
    @danabalanza2167 Před 5 lety

    Finished reading the bell jar and I loved it. Beautifully written indeed.

  • @eleanorschille-hudson4338
    @eleanorschille-hudson4338 Před 10 lety +1

    Dear John Green,
    Thank you for your exploratory, humble, and reasonable approach to all things worthwhile and interesting. I love your thoughts on history, current events, and abstract concepts; but I'm starting to think that most of all, I love your thoughts on poetry. So, thank you for being the English teacher from afar that I could never have in person. And finally, thank you for believing that teenagers have something to contribute to this world without taking them too seriously.
    Best wishes!
    Ellie Brower

  • @thruthe4thdimension
    @thruthe4thdimension Před 7 lety +194

    "People who suffer from crippling depression don't create anything." This is false. Sylvia Plath wrote massive amounts of poetry up to the day she killed herself.

    • @awinters039
      @awinters039 Před 7 lety +70

      The quote is "paralyzing depression" and people who are paralyzed are, by definition, not doing things.

    • @thruthe4thdimension
      @thruthe4thdimension Před 7 lety +3

      awinters039 If so then that's kindo f a meaningless things to say, huh? Especially when Plath apparently didn't even experience that "paralyzing depression"

    • @cloerose2
      @cloerose2 Před 7 lety +6

      do you know what depression feels like my dude? wondering what makes you think that way

    • @iainhowe4561
      @iainhowe4561 Před 6 lety +6

      I suffer from depression, and I'm productive both as a worker and as a creator. Depression affects the volume of the work I can put out but it doesn't stop me from working. Obviously paralyzing ANYTHING stops you from doing something, but that state is an effect of the Paralyzing and not an effect of the depression.

    • @brendano3735
      @brendano3735 Před 6 lety +7

      She was most likely suffering from manic depression, hence why she had such a creative burst before she inevitably killed herself

  • @legogaur08
    @legogaur08 Před 10 lety +26

    The idea of suicide is rather interesting to me. I have depression and crippling anxiety so it is often a very temping prospect. I do not fear death at all, the idea of absolutely nothing sounds like a huge relief sometimes. But I never consider it as something I might actually do because it would be a terrible thing to do to the people who care about me. I don't blame people who take their own lives, I understand them quite well, but it is still a terrible thing to do.

    • @EGYPTIANXENON
      @EGYPTIANXENON Před 10 lety

      you really need help :/

    • @ShadesOfMisery
      @ShadesOfMisery Před 10 lety +7

      I understand the idea of it being a relief from anxiety and depression, as I have suffered both. It really can be tempting. But if you're like me, you'll have certain times where you can think clearly enough to realize that while you need rest from your anxiety, the eternal rest is not the best option. It really is an overtly huge response to a problem that can be managed much more productively.

    • @legogaur08
      @legogaur08 Před 10 lety +2

      ***** Yeah, completely. I have never considered suicide as something I will actually do.

  • @janehowlett5158
    @janehowlett5158 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you, John Green, for giving me an accurate and deep explanation for who Sylvia Plath was and what her writing stands for.

  • @StarlightViolets
    @StarlightViolets Před 9 lety

    I read one of Sylvia's poems in English last year when we all picked poets to study (I picked William Butler Yeats), and my favorite of Sylvia's poems from the presentation was 'The Childless Woman'.

  • @Tallia3
    @Tallia3 Před 10 lety +9

    Why does no one seem to be discussing the adorable Catbug cameo? Catbug!!

  • @Nerdicaful
    @Nerdicaful Před 8 lety +46

    THE PLATH!!!

  • @polkadottedpolak
    @polkadottedpolak Před 10 lety

    Thank you so much for this video, CrashCourse team. My heart opened and I cried. It's exactly what I didn't know I needed.

  • @TobyKidMajor
    @TobyKidMajor Před 10 lety

    Nope, still can't get over the fact that I'm being taught about literature from my favorite author. Rewatching every crash course lit video, hope the next season is this awesome!

  • @Scixxy
    @Scixxy Před 10 lety +18

    You mentioned James Joyce as one of Plath's influences. I know it would be asking a lot, but is there any chance of covering him in this series?

  • @sebcedes
    @sebcedes Před 7 lety +51

    I had pain in my path
    Sylvia Plath
    My problems were a myriad
    I was having my period

  • @E11evenEntertainment
    @E11evenEntertainment Před 8 lety

    Congrats to me for finding Crash Course. I spend my nights working on visual effects and learning a wealth of new facts and perspectives. Loved this playlist and as a result I wonder since you are a published novelist, what advice you have for someone looking to become one. Perhaps there is a string of Crash Course episodes you could explore on that subject. Keep on!

  • @TheJackal25
    @TheJackal25 Před 10 lety +3

    I had an exam on Plath a week ago today. Dammit.

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  Před 10 lety +108

    The Poetry of Sylvia Plath: Crash Course Literature 216

    • @nachograssia3619
      @nachograssia3619 Před 10 lety +8

      Hi John. Question: Are you planning to do a video about any Argentinian or at least latinamerican author? I'm from Argentina and I love that kind of literature, it's my favorite. SO, please think about it. I give you some of my favorite: Silvina ocampo, Julio Cortázar, Jorge Luis Borges, Gabriel García Marquéz. Or any one else, I love everyone, it's just that I can't think of any other name XD Best wishes, Ignacio.

    • @samuelsisti4849
      @samuelsisti4849 Před 10 lety +3

      Ignacio grassia
      I'd love to see a video on Borges, or Marquez, also.

    • @maryjoleivac
      @maryjoleivac Před 10 lety +5

      Ignacio grassia A review on Jorge Luis Borges's short stories would be awesome

    • @nachograssia3619
      @nachograssia3619 Před 10 lety +1

      Maryjo Leiva Of courseee!!!!! But don't forget abaout his poetry, is amazing too. His poems are, after all, the soul of all his literature. Bur the short stories are incredible

    • @alyssabaker452
      @alyssabaker452 Před 9 lety +1

      CrashCourse PLEASE MAKE MORE OF THESE LITERATURE VIDEOS! IT HELPED ME SO MUCH!

  • @tconwaystacy
    @tconwaystacy Před 9 lety

    please start doing these again, i really love them and wish you would do more crash courses on literature

  • @LealahLupinIII
    @LealahLupinIII Před 10 lety

    I really needed to hear that open letter. Thanks, John.

  • @anthonydipasquale9334
    @anthonydipasquale9334 Před 9 lety +4

    1984 and Animal Farm definitely should be added to Crash Course in Literature.

  • @cillyhoney1892
    @cillyhoney1892 Před 10 lety +51

    Suicide is the end of suffering and pain. That's why people do it. Not because they are trying to solve a problem, temporary or permanent. They want the pain to stop and they don't see the pain ever going away. And they are correct, the pain never goes away. If you can learn to live with the pain, you survive, if you can't, you suicide.

    • @abdallababikir4473
      @abdallababikir4473 Před 5 lety +1

      thats deep. I do believe pain can go away. It might come back, but when it does one should be prepared.

  • @treble970
    @treble970 Před 10 lety

    I just finished The Bell Jar and am reading her collected late poems.
    I swear, I think Crash Course is going through my library!

  • @Sindizwe
    @Sindizwe Před 10 lety

    She was a fantastic writer. Her imagery incredibly lush, so alive which is always so strange, when it's used for poetry which is so much about death and stillness. Daddy is one of my favourite of hers.

  • @ihatecranberryjiuce
    @ihatecranberryjiuce Před 8 lety +85

    do the stranger by Albert Camus pls

    • @janet1643
      @janet1643 Před 6 lety +2

      Angel Martinez Albert Camus is one of my favourite writers and philosophers.

    • @ev6564
      @ev6564 Před 5 lety

      just read that in my philosophy class

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 Před 5 lety

      @Novi
      That is a straight up non-fiction philosophy essay. It isn't really "literature" in its traditional sense. Camus' main novels were "The Plague", "The Stranger", "The Fall", and "The Rebel".

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 Před 5 lety

      @Novi
      I mean, there isn't really a narrative in "The Myth of Sisyphus". It is just Camus stating plainly what his philosophy of Absurdism is.

  • @michikomanalang6733
    @michikomanalang6733 Před 8 lety +24

    THE PLAAAATH

  • @saraaguiarsimao968
    @saraaguiarsimao968 Před 5 lety +1

    i love Sylvia Plath, one of the best poets i have ever read. thank you for including her on crash course

  • @flexflix1997
    @flexflix1997 Před 8 lety +1

    please make more videos. I think loads of your viewers would love more videos, not enough people dedicate time to literature and explaining it. please make more.

  • @abhig61
    @abhig61 Před 8 lety +23

    Could you guys make one on George Orwell's work ? (Animal Farm or 1984)