Resources

Works Cited

Charteris-Black, Jonathan. “Shattering the Bell Jar: Metaphor, Gender, and Depression.” null 27.3 (2012): 199-216. Web.

de Villiers, Stephanie. “Metaphors of Madness: Sylvia Plath’s Rejection of Patriarchal Language in the Bell Jar.” null 62.2 (2019): 1-11. Web.

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. Yellow Wallpaper. New York: Start Publishing LLC, 1892. Print.

Hollup, Oddvar. “The Impact of Gender, Culture, and Sexuality on Mauritian Nursing: Nursing as a Non-Gendered Occupational Identity Or Masculine Field? Qualitative Study.” International journal of nursing studies 51.5 (2014): 752-60. Print.

Kellner, Charles. Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) in Literature: Sylvia Plath’s the Bell Jar., 2013. Web.

Lawrence, Anne A. “Gender Assignment Dysphoria in the DSM-5.” Archives of Sexual Behavior 43.7 (2014): 1263-6. Print.

Mitchell, S. Weir. “”The Yellow Wallpaper”.” “Selections from Fat and Blood, Wear and Tear, and Doctor and Patient”, 1877, 1872, 1886. Eds. Thomas L. Ersekin and Connie L. Richard.Rutgers University Press, 1993. 105-111. Print.

Parra Fernández, Laura de la. “‘We are all Mad here’: Sylvia Plath’s the Bell Jar as a Political Novel.” Revista de filología románica 33 (2016): 163. Print.

Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart. Doctor Zay. The Feminist Press, 1892. Print.

Plath, Sylvia. The Bell Jar: A Novel. HarperCollins, 2015. Print.

Secreast, Donnie. “Stones, Turkey Necks, and Gizzards: Grotesque Humor and Metaphors of Masculinity in Sylvia Plath’s the Bell Jar.” Studies in the Novel 52.1 (2020): 60-74. ProQuest One Academic. Web.

Seniuk, Patrick. “I’m Shocked: Informed Consent in ECT and the Phenomenological-Self.” Life sciences, society and policy 14.1 (2018): 1-19. Print.

Taylor, Joseph J., Hedy Kober, and David A. Ross. “The Electrochemical Brain: Lessons from the Bell Jar and Interventional Psychiatry.” Biological psychiatry (1969) 84.3 (2018): e23-4. Print.