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By ΠΠ»Π°Ρ Π‘ΠΈΠ»ΡΠ²ΠΈΡ
Sylvia Plath - 1998
Sylvia Plath began journaling in childhood, developing a near-daily practice by her time at Smith College. Her journal served as a repository for her imagination, a sourcebook for her writing, and a space for dreams and directives. These pages contain the genesis of much of her published work. Plath's urgent literary ambitions demanded an intense, chaotic, and sometimes violent creative process, the struggle of which is laid bare in her journals with unsparing clarity.