19 pages 38 minutes read

Sylvia Plath

The Munich Mannequins

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1965

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Themes

Despair

The poem’s overwhelmingly critical and despairing tone reflects the speaker’s distressed mental state. Plath creates a fractured state of mind through her use of form. With thoughts running irregularly over lines and stanzas, jumping back and forth through images and reflections, the pace is halting and the connections between phrases obscured.

The setting on a cold, Munich street in the dead of night reflects a sense of hopelessness as well. Winter is often associated with death, or the end of the growing season when all crops have died. Here, the coldness of winter reflects the coldness of society to women. Munich itself is a “morgue between Paris and Rome” (Line 12), where it is as if the cold city holds only the dead. The snowfall is used to create a sense of isolation and alienation. The snow “drops its pieces of darkness” (Line 16). As a result of the weather, “[n]obody’s about” (Line 17). This physical isolation matches the speaker’s mental and emotional alienation from society.

Gender Roles and Expectations

This poem reflects Plath’s complex and ambiguous relationship with the expectations placed upon women. On the one hand, she is critical of the beauty standards represented by mannequins and the women who choose to work as models and attain physical perfection over becoming a mother.