A Study Guide for Sylvia Plath's "The Applicant"
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A Study Guide for Sylvia Plath's "The Applicant" - Gale
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The Applicant
Sylvia Plath
1965
Introduction
Sylvia Plath's poem The Applicant,
written on October 11, 1962, during a profoundly productive period just before her suicide, was first published posthumously in Ariel in 1965. The poem features an aggressive salesman as its speaker, interviewing an applicant for his miracle product: marriage. At once dark and humorous, the poem's blistering tone toward marriage spares neither the unwitting groom nor the bride—who is presented as a mindless doll, an it,
who emerges from a closet when called to do whatever it is told. A shocking satire of the Cold War domestic ideology of the early 1960s that muddled the domestic sphere with consumer culture, The Applicant
turns the stereotypical advertising of the time on its head. Rather than advertise a product to a housewife, the housewife herself becomes a product to be bought and sold. Plath's genius is in full plume in this searing poem that seems to laugh out loud to keep from weeping.
The poem appears in Ariel: The Restored Edition, Harper Perennial, 2004, pp. 11–12.
Author Biography
Plath was born on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father, Otto, was a German immigrant and a professor of biology at Boston University. He died when Plath was eight years old following a long illness. Her mother, Aurelia, taught medical-secretarial training at Boston University and raised Plath and her younger brother. Plath excelled in school from an early age. Her first short story was published in Seventeen in 1950, and she enrolled in Smith College that same year. Along with regular publications in Seventeen, she won the 1951 Mademoiselle fiction contest and served on the editorial board of the Smith Review. She was published in the Christian Science Monitor and Harper's, held