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Anne Sexton (1928–1974) was an American poet and writer who became one of the most significant literary figures of the twentieth century, despite struggling with mental illness and personal trauma throughout her life. Born in Newton, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, Sexton emerged as a leading voice of confessional poetry—a movement that brought deeply personal, often disturbing subject matter into the realm of serious literature. Her work, which addressed themes of suicide, sexuality, motherhood, and mental breakdown with unprecedented candor, earned her numerous accolades, including the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1967 for her collection "Live or Die." Though her life ended tragically in suicide at age forty-five, her legacy continues to influence contemporary poetry and remains central to discussions of twentieth-century American literature.
{{Infobox person
| name = Anne Sexton
| birth_name = Anne Harvey
| birth_date = November 9, 1928
| birth_place = Newton, Massachusetts, U.S.
| death_date = October 4, 1974 (aged 45)
| death_place = Weston, Massachusetts, U.S.
| death_cause = Suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning
| occupation = Poet, author, educator
| education = Rogers Hall; Garland Junior College
| spouse = Alfred Muir "Kayo" Sexton II (m. 1948; div. 1973)
| children = Linda Gray Sexton; Joyce Ladd Sexton
| notable_works = ''Live or Die'' (1967); ''To Bedlam and Part Way Back'' (1960); ''Transformations'' (1971)
| awards = Pulitzer Prize for Poetry (1967)
}}


== History ==
Anne Sexton (November 9, 1928 – October 4, 1974) was an American poet who became one of the central figures of confessional poetry—a mid-twentieth-century literary movement that brought deeply personal, often disturbing subject matter into the realm of serious literature. Born in Newton, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, Sexton addressed themes of suicide, sexuality, motherhood, and mental breakdown with an unprecedented candor that transformed American poetry's sense of what could be said, and by whom. Her collection ''Live or Die'' earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1967, and her influence extended to generations of poets who followed her. She died by suicide on October 4, 1974, in Weston, Massachusetts, at age 45. Her legacy remains central to discussions of twentieth-century American literature, feminist literary criticism, and the representation of mental illness in art.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>


Anne Harvey Sexton was born on November 9, 1928, in Newton, Massachusetts, to a prominent New England family with deep roots in the Boston area. Her father, Ralph Churchill Harvey, was a wool merchant, while her mother, Mary Gray Staples Harvey, came from a wealthy family with established social standing in Boston society. Despite this privileged background, Sexton's childhood was marked by emotional distance from her parents and exposure to family dysfunction, including her great-aunt's suicide—an event that would haunt her psychological landscape for decades. She attended Rogers Hall, a preparatory school, and later the Garland Junior College in Boston before her formal education was interrupted by her decision to marry Alfred Muir "Kayo" Sexton II at age nineteen.<ref>{{cite web |title=Anne Sexton Biography and Literary Career |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/literature/anne-sexton/ |work=The Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
== Early Life and Education ==


Following her marriage in 1948, Sexton initially conformed to the expectations of her social class and era, becoming a housewife and mother. However, this period of apparent domestic stability masked severe psychological distress. She experienced her first serious mental health crisis in 1954, following the birth of her second daughter, and was hospitalized for what would later be diagnosed as severe depression with suicidal ideation. It was during her recovery and subsequent psychiatric treatment that Sexton began writing poetry, initially encouraged by her psychiatrist as a form of therapeutic expression. In the late 1950s, while living in Weston, Massachusetts, she attended a creative writing course at Boston University taught by the renowned poet Robert Lowell, an experience that proved transformative for her literary development. Under Lowell's mentorship and alongside fellow students such as Sylvia Plath, Sexton refined her distinctive voice and committed herself seriously to a writing career.
Anne Harvey Sexton was born on November 9, 1928, in Newton, Massachusetts, to a prominent New England family. Her father, Ralph Churchill Harvey, operated a wool manufacturing business, while her mother, Mary Gray Staples Harvey, came from an established family with firm social roots in Boston society. Despite this privileged background, Sexton's childhood was marked by emotional distance from her parents and exposure to family dysfunction. Among the formative shadows of her early years was the suicide of her great-aunt, Anna Ladd Dingley—an event that would recur as a psychological reference point throughout Sexton's adult life and writing.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>


Throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, Sexton's literary reputation flourished as she published increasingly acclaimed volumes of poetry from her home base in the Boston area. Her debut collection, "To Bedlam and Part Way Back" (1960), introduced readers to her unflinching exploration of mental hospitalization and family dysfunction. Subsequent collections, including "All My Pretty Ones" (1962), "Live or Die" (1966), and "The Book of Folly" (1972), solidified her reputation as one of America's most important contemporary poets. She taught creative writing at various institutions, including Boston University and Brandeis University, both of which were instrumental in her career development. Despite her professional success and the recognition she received, Sexton continued to battle severe depression, attempted suicide multiple times, and struggled with alcoholism and substance abuse. On October 4, 1974, at her home in Weston, Massachusetts, Sexton died by suicide, asphyxiating in her garage with the car running—a method that reflected both her ongoing suicidal preoccupation and the tragic arc that had defined her life.<ref>{{cite web |title=Anne Sexton: Life, Death, and Literary Legacy |url=https://www.wbur.org/arts/sexton-poet-boston |work=WBUR |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Sexton attended Rogers Hall, a preparatory school in Lowell, Massachusetts, and later enrolled at Garland Junior College in Boston. Her formal education was cut short when, at age nineteen, she eloped with Alfred Muir "Kayo" Sexton II on August 16, 1948. The couple settled in the Boston area, and Sexton initially conformed to the domestic expectations of her class and era, becoming a housewife and, eventually, the mother of two daughters: Linda Gray Sexton, born in 1953, and Joyce Ladd Sexton, born in 1955.


== Culture ==
== Mental Illness and the Turn to Poetry ==


Anne Sexton's cultural significance extends far beyond her own lifetime, as her work fundamentally altered the landscape of American poetry and influenced generations of writers who followed her. She was a central figure in the confessional poetry movement, which rejected the impersonal aesthetic that had dominated mid-twentieth-century modernism in favor of direct, autobiographical expression. Her poems addressed subjects—particularly female sexuality, menstruation, abortion, and infidelity—that had been largely taboo in serious literature. This openness was revolutionary for its time and contributed to broader cultural conversations about women's experiences, mental health, and the authentic representation of human suffering in art. Her willingness to discuss her psychiatric hospitalizations and suicide attempts in her poetry helped destigmatize mental illness to some degree, though her unflinching portrayal of depression and suicidal ideation also raised questions about the relationship between artistic expression and psychological pathology.
The apparent stability of Sexton's domestic life masked severe psychological distress that surfaced with increasing intensity through the mid-1950s. Following the birth of her second daughter, she experienced a serious mental breakdown and was hospitalized for what was diagnosed as severe depression with suicidal ideation. She would be hospitalized multiple times over the following two decades and would attempt suicide on several occasions. Her psychiatrist, Dr. Martin T. Orne, encouraged her to write poetry as a form of therapeutic expression—a suggestion that proved to be the pivot point of her creative life.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991. The biography drew on recordings of Sexton's therapy sessions made available by Dr. Orne, a decision that generated significant scholarly and ethical debate upon the book's publication.</ref>


Sexton's influence on feminist literary criticism and women's studies has been particularly enduring. Her assertion of female subjectivity and her refusal to shy away from the messy, difficult aspects of women's lives anticipated and influenced second-wave feminism. She appeared on national television, gave extensive interviews, and participated actively in the literary culture of Boston and beyond, making her a visible public intellectual despite her private struggles. Her poems have been anthologized extensively and are taught in high schools and universities throughout the United States and internationally. The publication of her collected works, biographical studies, and the later revelation of her complete correspondence has maintained scholarly interest in her life and work. Additionally, Sexton's legacy has extended into popular culture, inspiring theatrical adaptations, documentary films, and references in contemporary music and television, demonstrating the persistent resonance of her literary voice and personal story.<ref>{{cite web |title=Anne Sexton and American Poetry in the Sixties |url=https://mass.gov/info-details/massachusetts-literary-landmarks |work=Mass.gov Cultural Resources |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Sexton had no formal training as a poet when she began writing in earnest in the late 1950s, but she pursued the craft with extraordinary discipline. In 1957 and 1958 she studied with the poet John Holmes at the Boston Center for Adult Education, an experience that gave her early technical grounding and her first serious literary community. In 1958 and 1959, she audited the celebrated poetry seminar at Boston University taught by Robert Lowell. Lowell was one of the preeminent American poets of the era and a foundational voice in confessional poetry; his seminar attracted a remarkable cohort of writers. Among those who also audited the seminar was Sylvia Plath, who, like Sexton, was already an accomplished writer working through questions of personal and psychological material in verse. While "student" is sometimes used loosely to describe their presence in Lowell's workshop, both Sexton and Plath attended as adult auditors rather than enrolled degree candidates.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>


== Notable People and Connections ==
== Literary Career ==


Anne Sexton's life and career were significantly shaped by her relationships with other major literary figures, many of whom were based in or connected to the Boston area. Her most important professional relationship was with Robert Lowell, the renowned poet and professor at Boston University, who recognized her talent and provided crucial mentorship during her formative years as a writer. Through Lowell's Boston University workshop, Sexton formed a significant friendship with Sylvia Plath, another major confessional poet whose life would also end in suicide. The two women developed a close bond, discussing their writing, their mental health struggles, and their experiences as mothers and wives during a series of meetings in the Boston area. Though their friendship was relatively brief, ending with Plath's death in 1963, it represented a powerful connection between two of the twentieth century's most important poets and has become legendary in literary history.
=== Early Collections ===


Beyond her immediate circle, Sexton maintained professional relationships with numerous other significant figures in American letters. She corresponded with and was influenced by W.H. Auden, and she knew and worked with other poets of her generation including Adrienne Rich, whose feminist literary criticism would later provide important frameworks for understanding Sexton's work. Her psychiatrist, Dr. Martin T. Orne, played a crucial role not only in her mental health treatment but also in her literary career, as he encouraged her creative writing and later became her literary executor. Many of Sexton's students at Boston University and Brandeis University went on to significant literary careers themselves, a testament to her effectiveness as a teacher despite her personal struggles. Her influence extended to younger poets who cited her work as formative to their own development, including Sharon Olds, who directly acknowledged Sexton's impact on her decision to write poetry that addressed bodily experience and intimate family dynamics. This intergenerational influence has ensured that Sexton's literary legacy remains active and relevant to contemporary poetry.<ref>{{cite web |title=Confessional Poetry and Boston's Literary Scene in the 1960s |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/sexton-lowell-plath-era |work=The Boston Globe |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Sexton's debut collection, ''To Bedlam and Part Way Back'', was published by Houghton Mifflin in 1960. The book announced her voice without apology: its poems explored psychiatric hospitalization, the experience of mental breakdown, and the complicated bonds of family with a directness that struck many readers and critics as both revelatory and unsettling. The title itself drew on Dante's phrase, suggesting a journey into madness and a partial—but only partial—return to the ordinary world. The collection was widely reviewed and established Sexton as a significant new presence in American poetry.<ref>[https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/anne-sexton "Anne Sexton"], ''Poetry Foundation''. Accessed 2024.</ref>


== Legacy and Remembrance ==
Her second collection, ''All My Pretty Ones'' (1962), deepened her engagement with grief, loss, and the deaths of her parents, who both died in 1959. The title quotes from Shakespeare's ''Macbeth'', and the book carried an epigraph from Franz Kafka that declared the proper purpose of a book to be "an axe for the frozen sea within us." The collection was nominated for a National Book Award and further consolidated her critical reputation.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref> ''Selected Poems'' appeared in 1964, and ''Live or Die'' followed in 1966—published in the United States in 1966 and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1967. The collection chronicled, in roughly chronological order, a prolonged struggle between the impulse toward suicide and the will to continue living, and the Pulitzer judges recognized it as a work of exceptional power and formal achievement.<ref>[https://www.pulitzer.org/prize-winners-by-category/224 "Poetry"], ''The Pulitzer Prizes''. Accessed 2024.</ref>


The Boston area, particularly the communities where Sexton lived and worked, continues to acknowledge her literary and cultural significance. Her former homes in Newton and Weston have become sites of literary pilgrimage for scholars and poetry enthusiasts. The Anne Sexton Papers, housed in university archives, continue to attract researchers studying twentieth-century American poetry, women's writing, and the history of mental illness representation in literature. Numerous biographies, critical studies, and collections of her letters have been published in the decades since her death, sustaining scholarly engagement with her work. Poetry organizations in Massachusetts, including those affiliated with Boston-area universities, frequently feature discussions of Sexton's work and her contributions to American letters. Her poems are widely taught in educational settings, from secondary schools to graduate programs, ensuring that new generations encounter her distinctive voice and powerful explorations of human experience. The tension between her personal tragedy and her artistic achievements continues to generate important conversations about the nature of creative genius, mental illness, and the cost of artistic authenticity.
=== Later Collections and Experimentation ===


{{#seo: |title=Anne Sexton | Boston.Wiki |description=Anne Sexton (1928–1974) was a Pulitzer Prize–winning American poet from Newton, Massachusetts, whose confessional poetry addressed mental illness, trauma, and female experience. |type=Article }}
Having won the Pulitzer, Sexton continued to publish at a steady pace through the late 1960s and early 1970s. ''Love Poems'' appeared in 1969 and addressed erotic experience and female desire with the same frank attention she had brought to mental illness. ''Transformations'' (1971) represented a significant departure in method: the collection retold seventeen of Grimm's fairy tales in a darkly comic, subversive contemporary idiom, stripping the sanitized moralism from familiar stories to reveal the violence, sexuality, and power dynamics beneath. The book was widely praised and reached a broader audience than her previous work; the composer Conrad Susa later adapted it as an opera, which premiered in 1973.<ref>[https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/anne-sexton "Anne Sexton"], ''Poetry Foundation''. Accessed 2024.</ref>


[[Category:Boston landmarks]]
''The Book of Folly'' appeared in 1972 and included prose poems alongside verse. ''The Death Notebooks'' was published in early 1974, the last collection to appear during her lifetime, and engaged directly with mortality and religious questioning. ''The Awful Rowing Toward God'', a collection she completed in the final weeks of her life and which charted a desperate, ambivalent search for spiritual meaning, was published posthumously in 1975. ''45 Mercy Street'', also posthumous, was edited by her daughter Linda Gray Sexton and published in 1976. The ''Complete Poems'' was issued by Houghton Mifflin in 1981, with a foreword by her closest literary friend and collaborator, the poet Maxine Kumin.<ref>Kumin, Maxine. Foreword to ''The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981.</ref>
[[Category:Boston history]]
 
[[Category:20th century American poets]]
=== Poetry Readings and "Her Kind" ===
[[Category:Massachusetts writers]]
 
Sexton was a compelling and theatrical performer of her own work, and her public readings became an important dimension of her literary life. In the late 1960s she formed a chamber rock group, Anne Sexton and Her Kind, which accompanied her readings with improvisational music—an unusual and innovative approach to poetry performance that helped her reach audiences outside traditional literary venues. The ensemble took its name from her early poem "Her Kind," which became one of her most frequently cited works and a touchstone for readers interested in female identity, transgression, and the figure of the witch or outcast woman. The group performed at colleges and concert venues throughout New England and beyond, reflecting Sexton's instinct for finding new modes of connection with readers.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>
 
=== Teaching Career ===
 
Alongside her writing and performing, Sexton maintained a significant teaching career despite holding no advanced academic degree. She taught creative writing at Boston University beginning in 1969 and also taught at Colgate University, where she held a distinguished professorship. Her effectiveness as a teacher was widely attested by former students. Among the poets who acknowledged her direct influence on their development was Sharon Olds, who has credited Sexton's willingness to write about bodily experience and intimate family life as formative to her own sense of what poetry could do.<ref>[https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/anne-sexton "Anne Sexton"], ''Poetry Foundation''. Accessed 2024.</ref>
 
== Confessional Poetry ==
 
The confessional poetry movement, with which Sexton is most closely identified, emerged in the late 1950s and flourished through the 1960s as a reaction against the impersonal aesthetic that had dominated mid-century modernism. Where the reigning critical orthodoxy, shaped in part by T.S. Eliot's doctrine of impersonality, held that poetry should transcend the merely personal, confessional poets insisted on the autobiographical self as legitimate—indeed, necessary—poetic subject matter. The movement's other central figures included Robert Lowell, whose collection ''Life Studies'' (1959) is often credited with establishing its terms; W.D. Snodgrass, whose ''Heart's Needle'' (1959) explored the pain of divorce and separation from a child; John Berryman, whose ''Dream Songs'' catalogued psychological extremity through a semi-fictional alter ego; and Sylvia Plath, whose collection ''Ariel'' (published posthumously in 1965) brought the movement to its most concentrated intensity.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>
 
Within this company, Sexton occupied a distinctive position. Her subjects—menstruation, abortion, masturbation, infidelity, psychiatric institutionalization, and suicidal impulse—were more explicitly transgressive than those of her male counterparts, and her willingness to name female bodily and psychological experience directly placed her at the forefront of a broader cultural shift in what literature was permitted to say. Critics and readers responded with a mixture of admiration and discomfort that itself reflected the cultural stakes of her work. Some reviewers objected to what they characterized as exhibitionism or a lack of aesthetic distance; others argued, and subsequent literary history has largely confirmed, that Sexton's directness was not self-indulgence but a formally controlled and ethically serious artistic choice.<ref>McClatchy, J.D., ed. ''Anne Sexton: The Artist and Her Critics''. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978.</ref>
 
== Relationships and Personal Life ==
 
=== Marriage and Family ===
 
Sexton's marriage to Alfred "Kayo" Sexton was a defining and often turbulent constant of her adult life. The couple married in 1948 and divorced in 1973, one year before her death. By most accounts the marriage was shaped by periods of affection and partnership alongside serious strain generated by Sexton's recurring hospitalizations, her alcoholism, and the general pressures of living with severe mental illness. Her two daughters, Linda Gray Sexton and Joyce Ladd Sexton, grew up in the household in Newton and later Weston, Massachusetts. Linda Gray Sexton became a writer and published a memoir, ''Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton'' (1994), which offered a searching and at times painful account of her mother's life as experienced by her daughter, including allegations of sexual abuse that generated significant controversy and debate among scholars and biographers.<ref>Sexton, Linda Gray. ''Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton''. Boston: Little, Brown, 1994.</ref>
 
=== Friendship with Sylvia Plath ===
 
Among the literary friendships of the twentieth century, few have attracted more sustained attention than that between Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath. The two women met in Robert Lowell's Boston University seminar in 1958–1959 and formed a close bond during that period, meeting regularly—often at the Ritz-Carlton bar in Boston—to talk about poetry, motherhood, mental illness, and the peculiar pressures of being women who wrote with unguarded personal intensity. Their conversations, recalled later by Sexton, touched on the experience of previous suicide attempts with a frankness that both women found clarifying. When Plath died by suicide in London in February 1963, Sexton wrote one of her most significant elegies, "Sylvia's Death," which mourned Plath directly and also registered, with characteristic Sexton ambivalence, a kind of grief-shadowed envy for what she called Plath's "death as a trick." The poem has remained among the most discussed works in the canon of either poet and is frequently cited in studies of their parallel careers.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>
 
=== Maxine Kumin ===
 
If Sexton's friendship with Plath has become the more mythologized, her working relationship with the poet Maxine Kumin was arguably more sustained and more practically important to her literary development. The two women met at a poetry workshop in Boston in the late 1950s and developed a collaboration and friendship that lasted until Sexton's death. They spoke by telephone daily, workshopped each other's poems in real time, and provided the kind of steady editorial companionship that sustained both writers through periods of personal difficulty. Kumin, who would herself win the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1973 for ''Up Country'', later wrote the foreword to Sexton's ''Complete Poems'' and has been one of the most authoritative voices in discussions of Sexton's work and methods.<ref>Kumin, Maxine. Foreword to ''The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981.</ref>
 
== Death ==
 
On October 4, 1974, Anne Sexton died by suicide at her home in Weston, Massachusetts. Having returned from a lunch with Maxine Kumin, she put on her mother's old fur coat, went to the garage, and died of carbon monoxide poisoning with the engine of her car running. She was 45 years old. Her death came at a moment when, by external measures, her literary career had reached maturity: she had won the Pulitzer Prize, held a professorship, and completed what would be published as ''The Awful Rowing Toward God''. The circumstances of her death—its deliberateness, its proximity to completed work, its echo of the suicidal preoccupations that had run through her poetry since the beginning—have made it a recurring subject in discussions of the relationship between artistic creation and psychological suffering.<ref>Middlebrook, Diane Wood. ''Anne Sexton: A Biography''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.</ref>
 
== Cultural Significance and Feminist Legacy ==
 
Sexton's cultural significance extends

Latest revision as of 02:55, 5 June 2026

Template:Infobox person

Anne Sexton (November 9, 1928 – October 4, 1974) was an American poet who became one of the central figures of confessional poetry—a mid-twentieth-century literary movement that brought deeply personal, often disturbing subject matter into the realm of serious literature. Born in Newton, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, Sexton addressed themes of suicide, sexuality, motherhood, and mental breakdown with an unprecedented candor that transformed American poetry's sense of what could be said, and by whom. Her collection Live or Die earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1967, and her influence extended to generations of poets who followed her. She died by suicide on October 4, 1974, in Weston, Massachusetts, at age 45. Her legacy remains central to discussions of twentieth-century American literature, feminist literary criticism, and the representation of mental illness in art.[1]

Early Life and Education

Anne Harvey Sexton was born on November 9, 1928, in Newton, Massachusetts, to a prominent New England family. Her father, Ralph Churchill Harvey, operated a wool manufacturing business, while her mother, Mary Gray Staples Harvey, came from an established family with firm social roots in Boston society. Despite this privileged background, Sexton's childhood was marked by emotional distance from her parents and exposure to family dysfunction. Among the formative shadows of her early years was the suicide of her great-aunt, Anna Ladd Dingley—an event that would recur as a psychological reference point throughout Sexton's adult life and writing.[2]

Sexton attended Rogers Hall, a preparatory school in Lowell, Massachusetts, and later enrolled at Garland Junior College in Boston. Her formal education was cut short when, at age nineteen, she eloped with Alfred Muir "Kayo" Sexton II on August 16, 1948. The couple settled in the Boston area, and Sexton initially conformed to the domestic expectations of her class and era, becoming a housewife and, eventually, the mother of two daughters: Linda Gray Sexton, born in 1953, and Joyce Ladd Sexton, born in 1955.

Mental Illness and the Turn to Poetry

The apparent stability of Sexton's domestic life masked severe psychological distress that surfaced with increasing intensity through the mid-1950s. Following the birth of her second daughter, she experienced a serious mental breakdown and was hospitalized for what was diagnosed as severe depression with suicidal ideation. She would be hospitalized multiple times over the following two decades and would attempt suicide on several occasions. Her psychiatrist, Dr. Martin T. Orne, encouraged her to write poetry as a form of therapeutic expression—a suggestion that proved to be the pivot point of her creative life.[3]

Sexton had no formal training as a poet when she began writing in earnest in the late 1950s, but she pursued the craft with extraordinary discipline. In 1957 and 1958 she studied with the poet John Holmes at the Boston Center for Adult Education, an experience that gave her early technical grounding and her first serious literary community. In 1958 and 1959, she audited the celebrated poetry seminar at Boston University taught by Robert Lowell. Lowell was one of the preeminent American poets of the era and a foundational voice in confessional poetry; his seminar attracted a remarkable cohort of writers. Among those who also audited the seminar was Sylvia Plath, who, like Sexton, was already an accomplished writer working through questions of personal and psychological material in verse. While "student" is sometimes used loosely to describe their presence in Lowell's workshop, both Sexton and Plath attended as adult auditors rather than enrolled degree candidates.[4]

Literary Career

Early Collections

Sexton's debut collection, To Bedlam and Part Way Back, was published by Houghton Mifflin in 1960. The book announced her voice without apology: its poems explored psychiatric hospitalization, the experience of mental breakdown, and the complicated bonds of family with a directness that struck many readers and critics as both revelatory and unsettling. The title itself drew on Dante's phrase, suggesting a journey into madness and a partial—but only partial—return to the ordinary world. The collection was widely reviewed and established Sexton as a significant new presence in American poetry.[5]

Her second collection, All My Pretty Ones (1962), deepened her engagement with grief, loss, and the deaths of her parents, who both died in 1959. The title quotes from Shakespeare's Macbeth, and the book carried an epigraph from Franz Kafka that declared the proper purpose of a book to be "an axe for the frozen sea within us." The collection was nominated for a National Book Award and further consolidated her critical reputation.[6] Selected Poems appeared in 1964, and Live or Die followed in 1966—published in the United States in 1966 and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1967. The collection chronicled, in roughly chronological order, a prolonged struggle between the impulse toward suicide and the will to continue living, and the Pulitzer judges recognized it as a work of exceptional power and formal achievement.[7]

Later Collections and Experimentation

Having won the Pulitzer, Sexton continued to publish at a steady pace through the late 1960s and early 1970s. Love Poems appeared in 1969 and addressed erotic experience and female desire with the same frank attention she had brought to mental illness. Transformations (1971) represented a significant departure in method: the collection retold seventeen of Grimm's fairy tales in a darkly comic, subversive contemporary idiom, stripping the sanitized moralism from familiar stories to reveal the violence, sexuality, and power dynamics beneath. The book was widely praised and reached a broader audience than her previous work; the composer Conrad Susa later adapted it as an opera, which premiered in 1973.[8]

The Book of Folly appeared in 1972 and included prose poems alongside verse. The Death Notebooks was published in early 1974, the last collection to appear during her lifetime, and engaged directly with mortality and religious questioning. The Awful Rowing Toward God, a collection she completed in the final weeks of her life and which charted a desperate, ambivalent search for spiritual meaning, was published posthumously in 1975. 45 Mercy Street, also posthumous, was edited by her daughter Linda Gray Sexton and published in 1976. The Complete Poems was issued by Houghton Mifflin in 1981, with a foreword by her closest literary friend and collaborator, the poet Maxine Kumin.[9]

Poetry Readings and "Her Kind"

Sexton was a compelling and theatrical performer of her own work, and her public readings became an important dimension of her literary life. In the late 1960s she formed a chamber rock group, Anne Sexton and Her Kind, which accompanied her readings with improvisational music—an unusual and innovative approach to poetry performance that helped her reach audiences outside traditional literary venues. The ensemble took its name from her early poem "Her Kind," which became one of her most frequently cited works and a touchstone for readers interested in female identity, transgression, and the figure of the witch or outcast woman. The group performed at colleges and concert venues throughout New England and beyond, reflecting Sexton's instinct for finding new modes of connection with readers.[10]

Teaching Career

Alongside her writing and performing, Sexton maintained a significant teaching career despite holding no advanced academic degree. She taught creative writing at Boston University beginning in 1969 and also taught at Colgate University, where she held a distinguished professorship. Her effectiveness as a teacher was widely attested by former students. Among the poets who acknowledged her direct influence on their development was Sharon Olds, who has credited Sexton's willingness to write about bodily experience and intimate family life as formative to her own sense of what poetry could do.[11]

Confessional Poetry

The confessional poetry movement, with which Sexton is most closely identified, emerged in the late 1950s and flourished through the 1960s as a reaction against the impersonal aesthetic that had dominated mid-century modernism. Where the reigning critical orthodoxy, shaped in part by T.S. Eliot's doctrine of impersonality, held that poetry should transcend the merely personal, confessional poets insisted on the autobiographical self as legitimate—indeed, necessary—poetic subject matter. The movement's other central figures included Robert Lowell, whose collection Life Studies (1959) is often credited with establishing its terms; W.D. Snodgrass, whose Heart's Needle (1959) explored the pain of divorce and separation from a child; John Berryman, whose Dream Songs catalogued psychological extremity through a semi-fictional alter ego; and Sylvia Plath, whose collection Ariel (published posthumously in 1965) brought the movement to its most concentrated intensity.[12]

Within this company, Sexton occupied a distinctive position. Her subjects—menstruation, abortion, masturbation, infidelity, psychiatric institutionalization, and suicidal impulse—were more explicitly transgressive than those of her male counterparts, and her willingness to name female bodily and psychological experience directly placed her at the forefront of a broader cultural shift in what literature was permitted to say. Critics and readers responded with a mixture of admiration and discomfort that itself reflected the cultural stakes of her work. Some reviewers objected to what they characterized as exhibitionism or a lack of aesthetic distance; others argued, and subsequent literary history has largely confirmed, that Sexton's directness was not self-indulgence but a formally controlled and ethically serious artistic choice.[13]

Relationships and Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Sexton's marriage to Alfred "Kayo" Sexton was a defining and often turbulent constant of her adult life. The couple married in 1948 and divorced in 1973, one year before her death. By most accounts the marriage was shaped by periods of affection and partnership alongside serious strain generated by Sexton's recurring hospitalizations, her alcoholism, and the general pressures of living with severe mental illness. Her two daughters, Linda Gray Sexton and Joyce Ladd Sexton, grew up in the household in Newton and later Weston, Massachusetts. Linda Gray Sexton became a writer and published a memoir, Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton (1994), which offered a searching and at times painful account of her mother's life as experienced by her daughter, including allegations of sexual abuse that generated significant controversy and debate among scholars and biographers.[14]

Friendship with Sylvia Plath

Among the literary friendships of the twentieth century, few have attracted more sustained attention than that between Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath. The two women met in Robert Lowell's Boston University seminar in 1958–1959 and formed a close bond during that period, meeting regularly—often at the Ritz-Carlton bar in Boston—to talk about poetry, motherhood, mental illness, and the peculiar pressures of being women who wrote with unguarded personal intensity. Their conversations, recalled later by Sexton, touched on the experience of previous suicide attempts with a frankness that both women found clarifying. When Plath died by suicide in London in February 1963, Sexton wrote one of her most significant elegies, "Sylvia's Death," which mourned Plath directly and also registered, with characteristic Sexton ambivalence, a kind of grief-shadowed envy for what she called Plath's "death as a trick." The poem has remained among the most discussed works in the canon of either poet and is frequently cited in studies of their parallel careers.[15]

Maxine Kumin

If Sexton's friendship with Plath has become the more mythologized, her working relationship with the poet Maxine Kumin was arguably more sustained and more practically important to her literary development. The two women met at a poetry workshop in Boston in the late 1950s and developed a collaboration and friendship that lasted until Sexton's death. They spoke by telephone daily, workshopped each other's poems in real time, and provided the kind of steady editorial companionship that sustained both writers through periods of personal difficulty. Kumin, who would herself win the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1973 for Up Country, later wrote the foreword to Sexton's Complete Poems and has been one of the most authoritative voices in discussions of Sexton's work and methods.[16]

Death

On October 4, 1974, Anne Sexton died by suicide at her home in Weston, Massachusetts. Having returned from a lunch with Maxine Kumin, she put on her mother's old fur coat, went to the garage, and died of carbon monoxide poisoning with the engine of her car running. She was 45 years old. Her death came at a moment when, by external measures, her literary career had reached maturity: she had won the Pulitzer Prize, held a professorship, and completed what would be published as The Awful Rowing Toward God. The circumstances of her death—its deliberateness, its proximity to completed work, its echo of the suicidal preoccupations that had run through her poetry since the beginning—have made it a recurring subject in discussions of the relationship between artistic creation and psychological suffering.[17]

Cultural Significance and Feminist Legacy

Sexton's cultural significance extends

  1. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  2. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  3. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991. The biography drew on recordings of Sexton's therapy sessions made available by Dr. Orne, a decision that generated significant scholarly and ethical debate upon the book's publication.
  4. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  5. "Anne Sexton", Poetry Foundation. Accessed 2024.
  6. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  7. "Poetry", The Pulitzer Prizes. Accessed 2024.
  8. "Anne Sexton", Poetry Foundation. Accessed 2024.
  9. Kumin, Maxine. Foreword to The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981.
  10. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  11. "Anne Sexton", Poetry Foundation. Accessed 2024.
  12. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  13. McClatchy, J.D., ed. Anne Sexton: The Artist and Her Critics. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978.
  14. Sexton, Linda Gray. Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton. Boston: Little, Brown, 1994.
  15. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.
  16. Kumin, Maxine. Foreword to The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981.
  17. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Anne Sexton: A Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1991.