S Sheryl New member May 5, 2010 #1 How does sylvia Plath "daddy", portray the male figure and can this portrayal be seen as a “speaking out” against male brutality and/or the general inequities between male-female relations of the late 1950s/early 1960s?
How does sylvia Plath "daddy", portray the male figure and can this portrayal be seen as a “speaking out” against male brutality and/or the general inequities between male-female relations of the late 1950s/early 1960s?