McGraw-Hill OnlineMcGraw-Hill Higher EducationLearning Center
Student Center | Instructor Center | Information Center | Home
Electronic Resources
Internet Primer
Career Considerations
Summary & Paraphrasing
Avoiding Plagiarism
Study Skills Primer
Basic Concepts
How to Write about Literature
An Introduction to Argument
Exercise in Literary Analysis
American Lit and the Internet
About the Author
Orientation
Key Concepts
Essay Questions
Multiple Choice Quiz
Matching Quiz
Fill in the Blanks
True or False
Links
Texts Online
Feedback
Help Center


The American Tradition in Literature, Volume 2 Book Cover
The American Tradition in Literature, Volume 2, 10/e
George Perkins, Eastern Michigan University
Barbara Perkins, University of Toledo-Toledo


About the Author

Anne Gray Harvey Sexton turned to poetry as a release from years of depression and mental illness. That was the context of her work. The content, however, is some of the most accomplished in the canon of twentieth–century American literature. Her "confessional" and "personal" poetry is credited with opening some of the most sensitive experiences of women for exploration in fine art.

Neither Anne's education in a Boston finishing school nor her decision to elope before the age of twenty anticipated a career at the center of twentieth-century American literature. After eight years of marriage and the birth of two daughters, she found herself in and out of psychological counseling for chronic depression. At the suggestion of her psychiatrist that she try poetry as a way of expurgating her demons, Anne began writing seriously in 1956.

From a poetry workshop at the Boston Center for Adult Education, Anne Sexton found her way into Robert Lowell's seminar on poetry at Boston University where she met Maxine Kumin and Sylvia Plath. In her 1960 collection, To Bedlam and Part Way Back, Sexton revealed some of the most poignant experiences of her psychosis, characterized originally by her mentors as far too personal for publication. She never escaped the manacles of her illness, however, and she died in 1974, a victim to suicide.