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Anne Sexton

Anne Sexton (born Anne Gray Harvey; November 9, 1928 – October 4, 1974) was an American poet known for her highly personal, confessional verse. She won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1967 for her book Live or Die. Her poetry details her long battle with bipolar disorder, suicidal tendencies, and intimate details from her private life, including relationships with her husband and children, whom it was later alleged she physically and sexually assaulted.

Anne Sexton
Anne Sexton photographed by Elsa Dorfman
BornAnne Gray Harvey[1]
(1928-11-09)November 9, 1928
Newton, Massachusetts, United States
DiedOctober 4, 1974(1974-10-04) (aged 45)
Weston, Massachusetts, United States
OccupationPoet
NationalityAmerican
Literary movementConfessional poetry
SpouseAlfred Muller Sexton II (1948–1973)
Children

Early life and family Edit

Anne Sexton was born Anne Gray Harvey in Newton, Massachusetts to Mary Gray (Staples) Harvey (1901–1959) and Ralph Churchill Harvey (1900–1959). She had two older sisters, Jane Elizabeth (Harvey) Jealous (1923–1983) and Blanche Dingley (Harvey) Taylor (1925–2011). She spent most of her childhood in Boston. In 1945 she enrolled at Rogers Hall boarding school in Lowell, Massachusetts, later spending a year at Garland School.[2] For a time she modeled for Boston's Hart Agency. On August 16, 1948, she married Alfred Muller Sexton II and they remained together until 1973.[3][4] Sexton had her first child, Linda Gray Sexton, in 1953. Her second child, Joyce Ladd Sexton, was born two years later.

Poetry Edit

Sexton suffered from severe bipolar disorder for much of her life, her first manic episode taking place in 1954. After a second episode in 1955 she met Dr. Martin Orne, who became her long-term therapist at the Glenside Hospital. It was Orne who encouraged her to write poetry.[5]

The first poetry workshop she attended was led by John Holmes. Sexton felt great trepidation about registering for the class, asking a friend to make the phone call and accompany her to the first session. She found early acclaim with her poems; a number were accepted by The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine and the Saturday Review. Sexton later studied with Robert Lowell at Boston University alongside poets Sylvia Plath and George Starbuck.[4][6]

Sexton later paid homage to her friendship with Plath in the 1963 poem "Sylvia's Death". Her first volume of poetry, To Bedlam and Part Way Back, was published in 1960, and included the poem "Her Kind", which uses the persecution of witches as an analogy for the oppression of women in a patriarchal society.[7]

Sexton's poetic career was encouraged by her mentor W. D. Snodgrass, whom she met at the Antioch Writer's Conference in 1957. His poem "Heart's Needle" proved inspirational for her in its theme of separation from his three-year-old daughter.[8] Sexton first read the poem at a time when her own young daughter was living with her mother-in-law. She, in turn, wrote "The Double Image", a poem which explores the multi-generational relationship between mother and daughter. Sexton began writing letters to Snodgrass and they became friends.[citation needed]

While working with John Holmes, Sexton encountered Maxine Kumin. They became good friends and remained so for the rest of Sexton's life. Kumin and Sexton rigorously critiqued each other's work and wrote four children's books together. In the late 1960s, the manic elements of Sexton's illness began to affect her career, though she still wrote and published work and gave readings of her poetry. She collaborated with musicians, forming a jazz-rock group called Her Kind that added music to her poetry. Her play Mercy Street, starring Marian Seldes, was produced in 1969 after several years of revisions.[9] Sexton also collaborated with the artist Barbara Swan, who illustrated several of her books.[10]

Within 12 years of writing her first sonnet, she was among the most honored poets in the U.S.: a Pulitzer Prize winner, a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the first female member of the Harvard chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.[11][12]

Death Edit

 
Grave of Anne Sexton, located at Forest Hills Cemetery in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts

On October 4, 1974, Sexton had lunch with Kumin to revise galleys for Sexton's manuscript of The Awful Rowing Toward God, scheduled for publication in March 1975 (Middlebrook 396). On returning home she put on her mother's old fur coat, removed all her rings, poured herself a glass of vodka, locked herself in her garage, and started the engine of her car, ending her life by carbon monoxide poisoning.[13]

In an interview over a year before her death, she explained she had written the first drafts of The Awful Rowing Toward God in 20 days with "two days out for despair and three days out in a mental hospital." She went on to say that she would not allow the poems to be published before her death. She is buried at Forest Hills Cemetery & Crematory in Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts.

Content and themes of work Edit

Sexton is seen as the modern model of the confessional poet due to the intimate and emotional content of her poetry. Sexton often wrote and disclosed her struggles with mental illness through her work. Sexton included numerous obscene and repulsive topics, especially for women to talk about publicly. Maxine Kumin described Sexton's work: "She wrote openly about menstruation, abortion, masturbation, incest, adultery, and drug addiction at a time when the proprieties embraced none of these as proper topics for poetry."[14]

Sexton's work towards the end of the 1960s has been criticized as "preening, lazy and flip" by otherwise respectful critics.[11] Some critics regard her dependence on alcohol as compromising her last work. However, other critics see Sexton as a poet whose writing matured over time. "Starting as a relatively conventional writer, she learned to roughen up her line ... to use as an instrument against the 'politesse' of language, politics, religion [and] sex."[15]

Her eighth collection of poetry is entitled The Awful Rowing Toward God. The title came from her meeting with a Roman Catholic priest who, unwilling to administer last rites, told her "God is in your typewriter." This gave the poet the desire and willpower to continue living and writing. The Awful Rowing Toward God and The Death Notebooks are among her final works, and both center on the theme of dying.[16]

Her work started out as being about herself, however as her career progressed she made periodic attempts to reach outside the realm of her own life for poetic themes.[17] Transformations (1971), which is a re-visionary re-telling of Grimm's Fairy Tales, is one such book.[18]

(Transformations was used as the libretto for the 1973 opera of the same name by American composer Conrad Susa.) Later she used Christopher Smart's Jubilate Agno and the Bible as the basis for some of her work.[19]

Much has been made of the tangled threads of her writing, her life and her depression, much in the same way as with Sylvia Plath's suicide in 1963. Robert Lowell, Adrienne Rich and Denise Levertov commented in separate obituaries on the role of creativity in Sexton's death. Levertov says, "We who are alive must make clear, as she could not, the distinction between creativity and self-destruction."[6]

Subsequent controversy Edit

Following one of many suicide attempts and manic or depressive episodes, Sexton worked with therapist Martin Orne.[11] He diagnosed her with what is now described as bipolar disorder, but his competence to do so is called into question by his early use of allegedly unsound psychotherapeutic techniques.[20] During sessions with Sexton, he used hypnosis and sodium pentothal to recover supposedly repressed memories. During this process, he allegedly used suggestion to uncover memories of having been abused by her father.[21] This abuse was disputed in interviews with her mother and other relatives.[22]

Orne wrote that hypnosis in an adult frequently does not present accurate memories of childhood; instead, "adults under hypnosis are not literally reliving their early childhoods but presenting them through the prisms of adulthood."[23] According to Orne, Sexton was extremely suggestible and would mimic the symptoms of the patients around her in the mental hospitals to which she was committed. Diane Middlebrook's biography states that a separate personality named Elizabeth emerged in Sexton while under hypnosis. Orne did not encourage this development and subsequently this "alternate personality" disappeared. Orne eventually concluded that Anne Sexton was suffering from hysteria.[5]

During the writing of the Middlebrook biography, her daughter, Linda Gray Sexton, stated that she had been sexually assaulted by her mother.[21][24] In 1994, she published her autobiography Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton, which includes her own accounts of the abuse.[25][26]

Middlebrook published her controversial biography of Anne Sexton with the approval of daughter Linda, Anne's literary executor.[5] For use in the biography, Orne had given Diane Middlebrook most of the tapes recording the therapy sessions between Orne and Anne Sexton. The use of these tapes was met with, as The New York Times put it, "thunderous condemnation".[11] Middlebrook received the tapes after she had written a substantial amount of the first draft of Sexton's biography, and decided to start over. Although Linda Gray Sexton collaborated with the Middlebrook biography, other members of the Sexton family were divided over the book, publishing several editorials and op-ed pieces in The New York Times and The New York Times Book Review.

Controversy continued with the posthumous public release of the tapes (which had been subject to doctor-patient confidentiality). They are said to reveal Sexton's molestation of her daughter Linda,[27][26] her physically violent behavior toward both her daughters, and her physical altercations with her husband.[24]

Further controversy surrounds allegations that she had an "affair with" the therapist who replaced Orne in the 1960s.[28]

No action was taken to censure or discipline the second therapist. Orne considered the "affair" with the second therapist (given the pseudonym "Ollie Zweizung" by Middlebrook and Linda Sexton) to be the catalyst that eventually resulted in her suicide.[6]

Legacy Edit

Peter Gabriel dedicated his song "Mercy Street" (named for her play Mercy Street and inspired by his reading of her poem "45 Mercy Street") from his 1986 album So to Sexton.[29] She has been described as a "personal touchstone" for Morrissey, former lead singer and lyricist of The Smiths.[30] She is commemorated on the Boston Women's Heritage Trail.[31]

Bibliography Edit

Poetry Edit

  • To Bedlam and Part Way Back (1960)
  • All My Pretty Ones (1962)
  • Live or Die (1966)
  • Love Poems (1969)
  • Transformations (1971)
  • The Book of Folly (1972)
  • The Death Notebooks (1974)
  • The Awful Rowing Toward God (1975)
  • 45 Mercy Street (1976)
  • Words for Dr. Y.: Uncollected Poems (1978)
  • The Complete Poems: Anne Sexton (1981)

Prose Edit

  • Anne Sexton: A Self-Portrait in Letters (1977)

References Edit

  1. ^ "Anne Sexton". Academy of American Poets. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  2. ^ Middlebrook, p. 21.
  3. ^ Nelson, Cary (August 27, 2008). "Anne Sexton Chronology". Modern American Poetry website. University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. from the original on February 19, 2009. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  4. ^ a b Morris, Tim (April 23, 1999). "A Brief Biography of the Life of Anne Sexton". University of Texas at Arlington. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  5. ^ a b c Middlebrook
  6. ^ a b c Carroll, James (Fall 1992). . Ploughshares. 18 (58). Archived from the original on November 4, 2007. Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  7. ^ Kelly, Joseph, ed. (2018). The Seagull Book Of Poems (4th ed.). New York: Norton. pp. 282, 441. ISBN 978-0-393-63162-3.
  8. ^ Snodgrass, W.D., "Heart's Needle" 2006-09-19 at the Wayback Machine, American Academy of Poets.
  9. ^ (Musician Peter Gabriel wrote a song inspired by Sexton's work, also titled "Mercy Street".)
  10. ^ Sexton, Anne; Sexton, Linda Gray (2004). Anne Sexton: A Self-Portrait in Letters. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 374, 436. ISBN 9780618492428.
  11. ^ a b c d Pollitt, Katha (August 18, 1991). "The Death Is Not the Life". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2009.
  12. ^ Wagner-Martin, Linda (August 27, 2008). "Anne Sexton's Life". Modern American Poetry website. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. from the original on February 19, 2009. Retrieved February 2, 2009.
  13. ^ Hendin, Herbert (Fall 1993). "The Suicide of Anne Sexton". Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. 23 (3): 257–62. PMID 8249036.
  14. ^ Anne Sexton (1988) Steven E. Colburn, University of Michigan Press, 1988, p. 438; ISBN 9780472063796
  15. ^ Rothenberg, Jerome; Joris, Pierre, eds. (1995). Poems for the Millennium. Vol. 2. University of California Press. p. 330. ISBN 978-0-520-07225-1. OCLC 29702496.
  16. ^ . Poets of Cambridge, U.S.A. Harvard Square Library. Archived from the original on October 28, 2007.
  17. ^ Ostriker, Alicia (1983). Writing like a woman. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-06347-5. Self was the center, self was the perimeter, of her vision
  18. ^ Del George, Dana, The Supernatural in Short Fiction of the Americas: The Other World in the New World, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001, p. 37; ISBN 0-313-31939-1
  19. ^ Sexton, Anne (2000). Middlebrook, Diane Wood; George, Diana Hume (eds.). Selected Poems of Anne Sexton. Boston: Mariner Books. p. xvii. ISBN 978-0-618-05704-7. Retrieved May 13, 2009.
  20. ^ Jamison, K.R., "Manic-depressive illness and creativity" 2013-09-15 at the Wayback Machine. Scientific American, February 1995, pp. 68–73
  21. ^ a b Imagining Incest: Sexton, Plath, Rich, and Olds on Life with Daddy (2003) Gale Swiontkowski, Susquehanna University Press, p. 26; ISBN 9781575910611
  22. ^ Middlebrook, pp. 56–60.
  23. ^ Nagourney, Eric (February 17, 2000). "Martin Orne, 76, Psychiatrist and Expert on Hypnosis, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved January 6, 2009.
  24. ^ a b Hausman, Ken (September 6, 1991). . The Psychiatric News. Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved May 13, 2009.
  25. ^ Sexton, Linda Gray (1994) Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton. Little Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-78207-6
  26. ^ a b Kakutani, Michiko (October 14, 1994). "Books of the Times; A Daughter Revisits Sexton's Bedlam". The New York Times.,
  27. ^ Stanley, Alessandra (July 15, 1991). "Poet Told All; Therapist Provides the Record". The New York Times.
  28. ^ Morrow, Lance (September 23, 1991). . Time. Archived from the original on November 21, 2011. Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  29. ^ Holmes, Tim (August 14, 1986). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on August 15, 2014. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  30. ^ Thompson, Ben (March 22, 2015). "Morrissey review – in shockingly good voice throughout". The Guardian. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  31. ^ "Back Bay East". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.

Further reading Edit

  • Middlebrook, Diane Wood (1992) [1991]. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Vintage. ISBN 978-0-679-74182-4.
  • Sexton, Linda Gray (1994). Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother. Little, Brown & Co. ISBN 978-0-316-78207-4.
  • McGowan, Philip (2004). Anne Sexton & Middle Generation Poetry: The Geography of Grief. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-313-31514-5.
  • Salvio, Paula M. (2007). Anne Sexton: Teacher of Weird Abundance. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-7097-8. OCLC 70684774.
  • Gill, Jo (2007). Anne Sexton's Confessional Poetics. University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-3175-0.
  • Golden, Amanda, ed. (2016). This Business of Words: Reassessing Anne Sexton. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0813062204.

External links Edit

  • Barbara Kevles (Summer 1971). . The Paris Review. Summer 1971 (52). Archived from the original on November 27, 2020. Retrieved November 23, 2010.
  • Anne Sexton at home on YouTube (video)
  • Rare film footage on YouTube of Anne reciting some poetry, and some home movie excerpts. From an Arts Review program from the early 1990s.
  • . Here and Now. November 8, 2007. Interview with daughter Linda Gray Sexton, and Robert Clawson, who managed the Sexton's experimental band Anne Sexton and Her Kind.
  • Anne Sexton's papers ( September 15, 2013, at the Wayback Machine) at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin
  • Anne Sexton's art collection ( September 15, 2013, at the Wayback Machine) at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin

anne, sexton, singer, sexton, born, anne, gray, harvey, november, 1928, october, 1974, american, poet, known, highly, personal, confessional, verse, pulitzer, prize, poetry, 1967, book, live, poetry, details, long, battle, with, bipolar, disorder, suicidal, te. For the singer see Ann Sexton Anne Sexton born Anne Gray Harvey November 9 1928 October 4 1974 was an American poet known for her highly personal confessional verse She won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1967 for her book Live or Die Her poetry details her long battle with bipolar disorder suicidal tendencies and intimate details from her private life including relationships with her husband and children whom it was later alleged she physically and sexually assaulted Anne SextonAnne Sexton photographed by Elsa DorfmanBornAnne Gray Harvey 1 1928 11 09 November 9 1928Newton Massachusetts United StatesDiedOctober 4 1974 1974 10 04 aged 45 Weston Massachusetts United StatesOccupationPoetNationalityAmericanLiterary movementConfessional poetrySpouseAlfred Muller Sexton II 1948 1973 ChildrenLinda Gray SextonJoyce Ladd Sexton Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Poetry 3 Death 4 Content and themes of work 5 Subsequent controversy 6 Legacy 7 Bibliography 7 1 Poetry 7 2 Prose 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and family EditAnne Sexton was born Anne Gray Harvey in Newton Massachusetts to Mary Gray Staples Harvey 1901 1959 and Ralph Churchill Harvey 1900 1959 She had two older sisters Jane Elizabeth Harvey Jealous 1923 1983 and Blanche Dingley Harvey Taylor 1925 2011 She spent most of her childhood in Boston In 1945 she enrolled at Rogers Hall boarding school in Lowell Massachusetts later spending a year at Garland School 2 For a time she modeled for Boston s Hart Agency On August 16 1948 she married Alfred Muller Sexton II and they remained together until 1973 3 4 Sexton had her first child Linda Gray Sexton in 1953 Her second child Joyce Ladd Sexton was born two years later Poetry EditSexton suffered from severe bipolar disorder for much of her life her first manic episode taking place in 1954 After a second episode in 1955 she met Dr Martin Orne who became her long term therapist at the Glenside Hospital It was Orne who encouraged her to write poetry 5 The first poetry workshop she attended was led by John Holmes Sexton felt great trepidation about registering for the class asking a friend to make the phone call and accompany her to the first session She found early acclaim with her poems a number were accepted by The New Yorker Harper s Magazine and the Saturday Review Sexton later studied with Robert Lowell at Boston University alongside poets Sylvia Plath and George Starbuck 4 6 Sexton later paid homage to her friendship with Plath in the 1963 poem Sylvia s Death Her first volume of poetry To Bedlam and Part Way Back was published in 1960 and included the poem Her Kind which uses the persecution of witches as an analogy for the oppression of women in a patriarchal society 7 Sexton s poetic career was encouraged by her mentor W D Snodgrass whom she met at the Antioch Writer s Conference in 1957 His poem Heart s Needle proved inspirational for her in its theme of separation from his three year old daughter 8 Sexton first read the poem at a time when her own young daughter was living with her mother in law She in turn wrote The Double Image a poem which explores the multi generational relationship between mother and daughter Sexton began writing letters to Snodgrass and they became friends citation needed While working with John Holmes Sexton encountered Maxine Kumin They became good friends and remained so for the rest of Sexton s life Kumin and Sexton rigorously critiqued each other s work and wrote four children s books together In the late 1960s the manic elements of Sexton s illness began to affect her career though she still wrote and published work and gave readings of her poetry She collaborated with musicians forming a jazz rock group called Her Kind that added music to her poetry Her play Mercy Street starring Marian Seldes was produced in 1969 after several years of revisions 9 Sexton also collaborated with the artist Barbara Swan who illustrated several of her books 10 Within 12 years of writing her first sonnet she was among the most honored poets in the U S a Pulitzer Prize winner a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the first female member of the Harvard chapter of Phi Beta Kappa 11 12 Death Edit nbsp Grave of Anne Sexton located at Forest Hills Cemetery in Jamaica Plain MassachusettsOn October 4 1974 Sexton had lunch with Kumin to revise galleys for Sexton s manuscript of The Awful Rowing Toward God scheduled for publication in March 1975 Middlebrook 396 On returning home she put on her mother s old fur coat removed all her rings poured herself a glass of vodka locked herself in her garage and started the engine of her car ending her life by carbon monoxide poisoning 13 In an interview over a year before her death she explained she had written the first drafts of The Awful Rowing Toward God in 20 days with two days out for despair and three days out in a mental hospital She went on to say that she would not allow the poems to be published before her death She is buried at Forest Hills Cemetery amp Crematory in Jamaica Plain Boston Massachusetts Content and themes of work EditSexton is seen as the modern model of the confessional poet due to the intimate and emotional content of her poetry Sexton often wrote and disclosed her struggles with mental illness through her work Sexton included numerous obscene and repulsive topics especially for women to talk about publicly Maxine Kumin described Sexton s work She wrote openly about menstruation abortion masturbation incest adultery and drug addiction at a time when the proprieties embraced none of these as proper topics for poetry 14 Sexton s work towards the end of the 1960s has been criticized as preening lazy and flip by otherwise respectful critics 11 Some critics regard her dependence on alcohol as compromising her last work However other critics see Sexton as a poet whose writing matured over time Starting as a relatively conventional writer she learned to roughen up her line to use as an instrument against the politesse of language politics religion and sex 15 Her eighth collection of poetry is entitled The Awful Rowing Toward God The title came from her meeting with a Roman Catholic priest who unwilling to administer last rites told her God is in your typewriter This gave the poet the desire and willpower to continue living and writing The Awful Rowing Toward God and The Death Notebooks are among her final works and both center on the theme of dying 16 Her work started out as being about herself however as her career progressed she made periodic attempts to reach outside the realm of her own life for poetic themes 17 Transformations 1971 which is a re visionary re telling of Grimm s Fairy Tales is one such book 18 Transformations was used as the libretto for the 1973 opera of the same name by American composer Conrad Susa Later she used Christopher Smart s Jubilate Agno and the Bible as the basis for some of her work 19 Much has been made of the tangled threads of her writing her life and her depression much in the same way as with Sylvia Plath s suicide in 1963 Robert Lowell Adrienne Rich and Denise Levertov commented in separate obituaries on the role of creativity in Sexton s death Levertov says We who are alive must make clear as she could not the distinction between creativity and self destruction 6 Subsequent controversy EditFollowing one of many suicide attempts and manic or depressive episodes Sexton worked with therapist Martin Orne 11 He diagnosed her with what is now described as bipolar disorder but his competence to do so is called into question by his early use of allegedly unsound psychotherapeutic techniques 20 During sessions with Sexton he used hypnosis and sodium pentothal to recover supposedly repressed memories During this process he allegedly used suggestion to uncover memories of having been abused by her father 21 This abuse was disputed in interviews with her mother and other relatives 22 Orne wrote that hypnosis in an adult frequently does not present accurate memories of childhood instead adults under hypnosis are not literally reliving their early childhoods but presenting them through the prisms of adulthood 23 According to Orne Sexton was extremely suggestible and would mimic the symptoms of the patients around her in the mental hospitals to which she was committed Diane Middlebrook s biography states that a separate personality named Elizabeth emerged in Sexton while under hypnosis Orne did not encourage this development and subsequently this alternate personality disappeared Orne eventually concluded that Anne Sexton was suffering from hysteria 5 During the writing of the Middlebrook biography her daughter Linda Gray Sexton stated that she had been sexually assaulted by her mother 21 24 In 1994 she published her autobiography Searching for Mercy Street My Journey Back to My Mother Anne Sexton which includes her own accounts of the abuse 25 26 Middlebrook published her controversial biography of Anne Sexton with the approval of daughter Linda Anne s literary executor 5 For use in the biography Orne had given Diane Middlebrook most of the tapes recording the therapy sessions between Orne and Anne Sexton The use of these tapes was met with as The New York Times put it thunderous condemnation 11 Middlebrook received the tapes after she had written a substantial amount of the first draft of Sexton s biography and decided to start over Although Linda Gray Sexton collaborated with the Middlebrook biography other members of the Sexton family were divided over the book publishing several editorials and op ed pieces in The New York Times and The New York Times Book Review Controversy continued with the posthumous public release of the tapes which had been subject to doctor patient confidentiality They are said to reveal Sexton s molestation of her daughter Linda 27 26 her physically violent behavior toward both her daughters and her physical altercations with her husband 24 Further controversy surrounds allegations that she had an affair with the therapist who replaced Orne in the 1960s 28 No action was taken to censure or discipline the second therapist Orne considered the affair with the second therapist given the pseudonym Ollie Zweizung by Middlebrook and Linda Sexton to be the catalyst that eventually resulted in her suicide 6 Legacy EditPeter Gabriel dedicated his song Mercy Street named for her play Mercy Street and inspired by his reading of her poem 45 Mercy Street from his 1986 album So to Sexton 29 She has been described as a personal touchstone for Morrissey former lead singer and lyricist of The Smiths 30 She is commemorated on the Boston Women s Heritage Trail 31 Bibliography EditPoetry Edit To Bedlam and Part Way Back 1960 All My Pretty Ones 1962 Live or Die 1966 Love Poems 1969 Transformations 1971 The Book of Folly 1972 The Death Notebooks 1974 The Awful Rowing Toward God 1975 45 Mercy Street 1976 Words for Dr Y Uncollected Poems 1978 The Complete Poems Anne Sexton 1981 Prose Edit Anne Sexton A Self Portrait in Letters 1977 References Edit Anne Sexton Academy of American Poets Retrieved May 29 2018 Middlebrook p 21 Nelson Cary August 27 2008 Anne Sexton Chronology Modern American Poetry website University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Archived from the original on February 19 2009 Retrieved February 20 2009 a b Morris Tim April 23 1999 A Brief Biography of the Life of Anne Sexton University of Texas at Arlington Retrieved February 20 2009 a b c Middlebrook a b c Carroll James Fall 1992 Review Anne Sexton A Biography Ploughshares 18 58 Archived from the original on November 4 2007 Retrieved January 18 2009 Kelly Joseph ed 2018 The Seagull Book Of Poems 4th ed New York Norton pp 282 441 ISBN 978 0 393 63162 3 Snodgrass W D Heart s Needle Archived 2006 09 19 at the Wayback Machine American Academy of Poets Musician Peter Gabriel wrote a song inspired by Sexton s work also titled Mercy Street Sexton Anne Sexton Linda Gray 2004 Anne Sexton A Self Portrait in Letters Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 374 436 ISBN 9780618492428 a b c d Pollitt Katha August 18 1991 The Death Is Not the Life The New York Times Retrieved January 9 2009 Wagner Martin Linda August 27 2008 Anne Sexton s Life Modern American Poetry website University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Archived from the original on February 19 2009 Retrieved February 2 2009 Hendin Herbert Fall 1993 The Suicide of Anne Sexton Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior 23 3 257 62 PMID 8249036 Anne Sexton 1988 Steven E Colburn University of Michigan Press 1988 p 438 ISBN 9780472063796 Rothenberg Jerome Joris Pierre eds 1995 Poems for the Millennium Vol 2 University of California Press p 330 ISBN 978 0 520 07225 1 OCLC 29702496 Anne Sexton Poets of Cambridge U S A Harvard Square Library Archived from the original on October 28 2007 Ostriker Alicia 1983 Writing like a woman University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 06347 5 Self was the center self was the perimeter of her vision Del George Dana The Supernatural in Short Fiction of the Americas The Other World in the New World Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 p 37 ISBN 0 313 31939 1 Sexton Anne 2000 Middlebrook Diane Wood George Diana Hume eds Selected Poems of Anne Sexton Boston Mariner Books p xvii ISBN 978 0 618 05704 7 Retrieved May 13 2009 Jamison K R Manic depressive illness and creativity Archived 2013 09 15 at the Wayback Machine Scientific American February 1995 pp 68 73 a b Imagining Incest Sexton Plath Rich and Olds on Life with Daddy 2003 Gale Swiontkowski Susquehanna University Press p 26 ISBN 9781575910611 Middlebrook pp 56 60 Nagourney Eric February 17 2000 Martin Orne 76 Psychiatrist and Expert on Hypnosis Dies The New York Times Retrieved January 6 2009 a b Hausman Ken September 6 1991 Psychiatrist Criticized Over Release Of Poet s Psychotherapy Tapes The Psychiatric News Archived from the original on March 21 2009 Retrieved May 13 2009 Sexton Linda Gray 1994 Searching for Mercy Street My Journey Back to My Mother Anne Sexton Little Brown amp Co ISBN 0 316 78207 6 a b Kakutani Michiko October 14 1994 Books of the Times A Daughter Revisits Sexton s Bedlam The New York Times Stanley Alessandra July 15 1991 Poet Told All Therapist Provides the Record The New York Times Morrow Lance September 23 1991 Pains of The Poet And Miracles Time Archived from the original on November 21 2011 Retrieved January 18 2009 Holmes Tim August 14 1986 So Rolling Stone Archived from the original on August 15 2014 Retrieved June 24 2015 Thompson Ben March 22 2015 Morrissey review in shockingly good voice throughout The Guardian Retrieved June 24 2015 Back Bay East Boston Women s Heritage Trail Further reading EditMiddlebrook Diane Wood 1992 1991 Anne Sexton A Biography Boston Vintage ISBN 978 0 679 74182 4 Sexton Linda Gray 1994 Searching for Mercy Street My Journey Back to My Mother Little Brown amp Co ISBN 978 0 316 78207 4 McGowan Philip 2004 Anne Sexton amp Middle Generation Poetry The Geography of Grief Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 313 31514 5 Salvio Paula M 2007 Anne Sexton Teacher of Weird Abundance Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 7097 8 OCLC 70684774 Gill Jo 2007 Anne Sexton s Confessional Poetics University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0 8130 3175 0 Golden Amanda ed 2016 This Business of Words Reassessing Anne Sexton Gainesville FL University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0813062204 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Anne Sexton nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anne Sexton Barbara Kevles Summer 1971 Anne Sexton The Art of Poetry No 15 The Paris Review Summer 1971 52 Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved November 23 2010 Anne Sexton at home on YouTube video Rare film footage on YouTube of Anne reciting some poetry and some home movie excerpts From an Arts Review program from the early 1990s Requiem For Anne Sexton Here and Now November 8 2007 Interview with daughter Linda Gray Sexton and Robert Clawson who managed the Sexton s experimental band Anne Sexton and Her Kind Anne Sexton s papers Archived September 15 2013 at the Wayback Machine at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin Anne Sexton s art collection Archived September 15 2013 at the Wayback Machine at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne Sexton amp oldid 1176863739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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