Anne Sexton

@Writers, Timeline and Personal Life

Anne Sexton was a famous American poet known for her confessional poems

Nov 9, 1928

SuicideMassachusettsBipolar DisorderDepressionAmericanBoston UniversityWritersPoetsScorpio Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 9, 1928
  • Died on: October 4, 1974
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Boston University, Writers, Poets
  • City/State: Massachusetts
  • Spouses: Alfred Sexton
  • Childrens: Joyce Ladd Sexton, Linda Gray Sexton

Anne Sexton born at

Newton, Massachusetts, United States

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Birth Place

Anne Sexton got married at the age of nineteen to Alfred Muller Sexton II. The couple had two daughters. The marriage was a difficult one marred by insecurity and abuse. She did not have a good relationship with her children as well and is said to have resorted to abusing them on several occasions.

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Personal Life

One of the main reasons behind her mental illnesses was believed to be sexual abuse by her parents during her childhood, which led to fear and trauma from an early age.

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Personal Life

She had shared some tapes with her doctor, which were released after her death. Those tapes are said to have revealed her inappropriate behavior towards her daughters.

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Personal Life

Anne Sexton was born Anne Gray Harvey on 9 November 1928, in Newton, Massachusetts. Her father was Ralph Harvey, a successful woolen manufacturer and her mother was Mary Gray Staples.

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Childhood & Early Life

Though she was raised in comfortable middle-class circumstances in Weston, Massachusetts, she was not at all happy with her life. Though she didn’t have a good relationship with her parents, she shared a close bond with her maiden great aunt ‘Nana’ (Anna Dingley), who lived with the family during her adolescence.

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Childhood & Early Life

She used to strongly dislike school, and lacked the ability to concentrate. At the age of 19, she got married to Alfred ‘Kayo’ Sexton II. She gave birth to her first child in 1953, and second one in 1955.

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Childhood & Early Life

After the birth of her first daughter, she suffered her first breakdown and was admitted to a neuropsychiatric hospital. Her depression worsened after the birth of her second daughter and she sought therapy once again.

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Childhood & Early Life

It was during the treatment that her therapist urged her to start writing about her thoughts and feelings. This led to her joining various writing groups, which in turn led to her friendship with many other poets like Robert Lowell, George Starbuck and Sylvia Plath.

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Childhood & Early Life

Attending a poetry workshop led by John Holmes marked the beginning of her literary career. A good number of her poems was accepted by ‘The New Yorker’, ‘Harpers’ Magazine’ and ‘Saturday Review’. Later she went to Boston University to study and soon she mastered the techniques of poetry which led to her gaining widespread attention.

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Career

She met W.D. Snodgrass, a well-known American poet at the Antioch Writer’s Conference in 1957. They became close friends and he used to inspire as well as encourage her in writing poetry. Around this time she also met Maxine Kumin; they became good friends and wrote four children’s books together.

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Career

In an interview, Anne Sexton discussed the influence Snodgrass had on her and her work. She claimed to be strongly influenced by Snodgrass’s ‘Heart’s Needle.’ She also talked about how everyone criticized and discouraged her. They used to think her works were too personal and confessional and advised her to change her writing style. But Snodgrass’s works gave her the inspiration to continue writing in her own style.

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Career

In 1960, her collection of poetry ‘To Bedlam and Part Way Back’ was published, which received much appreciation and positive reviews.

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Career

In the late 1960s, having lost both her parents unexpectedly, her mental issues increased which began to affect her career severely. However, she continued to write poems as well as get her works published. She also worked together with a group of musicians and formed a jazz-rock group that used to add music to her poetry. In addition, she worked together with Barbara Swan, a well-known American painter and illustrator, who illustrated many of the books she wrote.

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Career

Anne Sexton’s most famous work was ‘Live or Die’ for which she won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Some of the poems are in free verse, while others are in rhythm. The poems, which were written in chronological order are mainly about Sexton’s troubled relationships with her mother and her daughters, and the way she dealt with her mental illness.

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Major Works

She wrote ‘Transformations’ a book of poem-stories which was a strange retelling of seventeen Grimms fairy tales, like ‘Snow White’, ‘Frog Prince’, and ‘Red Riding Hood.’ The retelling of these popular tales was accomplished in a very personalized way that was much appreciated by the critics.

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Major Works

She wrote ‘The Awful Rowing Toward God’ which was published posthumously in 1975. Her meeting with a Catholic Priest who had given her the willpower and desire to continue living and writing, inspired her in writing this book. She also analyzed various things in this book like the existence of God, as well as the meaning of life.

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Major Works