Faculty of Arts,
Chulalongkorn University
The
Bed
Book
(1959)
Sylvia Plath
(1932–1963)
Sample Student
Responses to Sylvia Plath's The Bed Book
Response 1:
Anchalee
Kamnoedkaeo
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
3, 2009
Reading
Response #1
Beds that Fly
In
the movie Basic Instinct (1992), the
character Catherine Tramell, played by Sharon Stone,
notoriously invokes Coleridge’s idea of “suspension
of disbelief” as an alibi.
“You make it up,” she says, “but it has to
be believable.”
Tramell is being interrogated as a murder
suspect and her defense is a literary pact between
writer and reader.
“I’d have to be pretty stupid to write a
book about a killing and then kill him the way I
described in my book.
I’d be announcing myself as the killer. I’m not
stupid.” In
effect, she can’t be the murderer because she wrote
about the murder.
That the story is convincing shows her
skill as a fiction writer, not as perpetrator. Putting
your disbelief on hold is why you can enjoy Harry
Potter.
You are willing to ignore your disbelief for
the moment of reading that paintings can talk, that
sprinkling powder over your head can get you from
one place to another across town in a flash.
Put another way, if you want to enjoy
reading, you should be willing to believe.
This is the demand of Sylvia Plath’s The
Bed Book which offers us such fantastic
notions as Snack Beds with automatic dispensers
“Just a finger to stick in / The slot, and out come
/ Cakes and cold chicken” (39–41).
We are not stupid.
Plath’s
poem asks us to “see if the Big Dipper’s / Full of
stew” (173–74) and dares us to revel in springing
“From a Bounceable Bed” even though “You bounce into
the blue—” (l. 163–64).
I did not feel lost in that open blue. In
letting go of my preconceptions and inhibitions, I
was too busy entertaining new combinations of
things, actions and ideas, and the outcome is better
than cakes. For
me, having traveled with Plath from Timbuktoo to
Aunt Joan’s and enjoyed every minute of it, reading
is believing.
Works Cited
Eszterhas,
Joe. Basic
Instinct.
1992.
Screenplay.
Daily Script 3 June 2009
<http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/basic_instinct.html>. |
|
Response 1 (revised)
Anchalee
Kamnoedkaeo
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
3, 2009
Reading
Response #1 (revised)
Beds that Fly
Suspension
of disbelief is what makes fiction come alive. This pact
between writer and reader coined by Coleridge is
notoriously invoked as an alibi by the character
Catherine Tramell played by Sharon Stone in the
movie Basic Instinct (1992) when being
questioned for murder: “You make it up, but it has
to be believable.”
Fiction can be made to seem real but it is
not reality, Tramell reminds her interrogators, “I’d
have to be pretty stupid to write a book about a
killing and then kill him the way I described in my
book…I’m not stupid.”
The writer agrees to verisimilitude, the
reader agrees to put their disbelief on hold, and
the fictional world is enabled for our enjoyment:
thriller dramas where writers can kill without being
killers, fantasy series like Harry Potter
where sprinkling floo powder can get you across town
via fireplaces, and, in this case, Sylvia Plath’s The
Bed Book where Snack Beds come with automatic
dispensers “Just a finger to stick in / The slot,
and out come / Cakes and cold chicken” (39–41). We are
not stupid, and our enjoyment does not come at the
price of intelligence.
The
opposite is true.
Plath’s poem shows us “An Elephant Bed”
that can give “A trunk-spray shower” (129, 139),
asks us to “see if the Big Dipper’s / Full of
stew” (173–74), and dares us to revel in springing
“From a Bounceable Bed” even though “You bounce
into the blue—” (163–64).
I did not feel lost.
In that wide open blue, I let go of my
white little preconceptions of beds and of my jam
rambling inhibitions and was fantastically busy
eating up new combinations of things, actions and
ideas, and the outcome is better than cakes. For me,
having willingly suspended my disbelief in
traveling with Plath from Timbuktoo to Aunt Joan’s
and enjoyed every minute of it, reading is
believing.
Works Cited
Eszterhas,
Joe. Basic
Instinct.
1992.
Screenplay.
Daily Script 3 June 2009
<http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/basic_instinct.html>. |
|
Discussion at Roundtable Conversation
Some books on Plath at Chula
Barnard, Caroline King. Sylvia
Plath. Boston: Twayne, 1978. (CL 811.54
P716Bs)
Bassnett, Susan. Sylvia
Plath: An Introduction to the Poetry. Basingstoke: Palgrave,
2005. (Arts PS3566.L27
B321S)
Bloom, Harold, ed. Sylvia
Plath. New York: Chelsea House, 1989. (CL 92
P713S)
Butscher, Edward. Sylvia
Plath:
The Woman and the Work. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1977. (CL 92
P716B)
The Cambridge Companion to
Sylvia Plath. Ed. Jo Gill. Cambridge: Cambridge UP,
2006. (Arts PS3566.L27
C178 2006)
Holbrook, David. Sylvia
Plath: Poetry and Existence. London: Athlone, 1976. (CL 811.54
P716H)
Lane, Gary. Sylvia
Plath: A Bibliography. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1978.
(CL ref 016.81154
P716L)
Rosenblatt, Jon. Sylvia
Plath: The Poetry of Initiation. Chapel Hill: U of North
Carolina P, 1979. (Arts PS3566.L27
R813S)
Wagner-Martin, Linda. Sylvia
Plath:
A Biography. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987. (Arts PS3566.L27
W134S)
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