Ted Hughes

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Standard Name: Hughes, Ted

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
SP 's Selected Poems, chosen by Ted Hughes , were posthumously published.
Tabor, Stephen. Sylvia Plath: An Analytical Bibliography. Meckler.
62-3
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
The Journals of Sylvia Plath, 1950-1962, edited by Karen V. Kukil , appeared after the death of Plath's husband, Ted Hughes : the first printing of the entire corpus of Plath's surviving journals.
Rose, Jacqueline. “So many lives, so little time for a desperate poet”. Guardian Weekly, p. 17.
17
Family and Intimate relationships Sylvia Plath
At Cambridge she met Ted Hughes , a British poet and fellow-student: his first passionate note to her is dated March 1956. In later letters he used an insistent baby-talk perhaps modelled on the Journal...
Family and Intimate relationships Sylvia Plath
Ted Hughes continued throughout the rest of his life to be frequently unfaithful to his primary relationship, which has in turn made difficulties for researchers. Carol Hughes , his widow, withdrew authorization from Jonathan Bate...
Family and Intimate relationships Sylvia Plath
SP married Ted Hughes at the Church of St George the Martyr in Bloomsbury, London, on James Joyce 's Bloomsday.
Wagner-Martin, Linda. Sylvia Plath: A Biography. Simon and Schuster.
134
Butscher, Edward. Sylvia Plath: Method and Madness. Seabury Press.
189
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
At the time of her death SP had completed a substantial portion of a novel she had tentatively titled Double Exposure.
Hughes, Ted, and Sylvia Plath. “Introduction”. Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams, Harper and Row, pp. 1-9.
1
The novel portrayed the deceitful relationship of, to all outward appearances, a...
Leisure and Society Sylvia Plath
SP and Ted Hughes attended a writers' retreat in Yaddo, Saratoga Springs.
Hayman, Ronald. The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath. Heinemann.
xiii, 126
Residence Sylvia Plath
SP and Ted Hughes moved from Boston back to a small flat in London; Sylvia was pregnant.
Hayman, Ronald. The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath. Heinemann.
131-2
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
Hughes was pressured to publish SP 's work shortly after her death. Exercising his copyright control as literary executor, he omitted fourteen of the forty-one poems which Plath had prepared in a collection she had...
Family and Intimate relationships Sylvia Plath
SP 's daughter, Frieda Rebecca , was born at home in the flat which she and Ted Hughes occupied in London.
Hayman, Ronald. The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath. Heinemann.
xiii, 132
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
An American edition with further selections appeared in 1979.
Tabor, Stephen. Sylvia Plath: An Analytical Bibliography. Meckler.
50
Ted Hughes wrote the introduction to the US edition, in which he discussed Plath's prose writing. The still-life graphic artist in her was loyal...
Family and Intimate relationships Sylvia Plath
SP 's son, Nicholas Farrar Hughes , was born at home in Plath's and Hughes 's house, Court Green in Devon, and named after the seventeenth-century Nicholas Ferrar , whom Ted Hughes claimed as...
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
Intimate or upsetting passages were censored by Ted Hughes and his sister Olwyn Hughes . Ted Hughes has described Plath's journal writing as generally negative self-castigation, or a means of rallying her determination to get...
Residence Sylvia Plath
SP and Ted Hughes moved from London to North Tawton in Devon: to Court Green, a large house standing on three acres of land.
Hayman, Ronald. The Death and Life of Sylvia Plath. Heinemann.
145-7
Textual Production Sylvia Plath
Of the journals for the last two years of Plath's life, her husband destroyed one part. He said later that he wanted to protect their children, thinking of forgetfulness as essential to survival.
Rose, Jacqueline. “So many lives, so little time for a desperate poet”. Guardian Weekly, p. 17.
17
The...

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