I chose this poem to post for a few reasons. Sylvia Plath wrote this poem and read it on the BBC radio shortly before committing suicide. She was born in 1932. Many of her poems are considered "confessional poetry". This poem isn't blatant because she transforms herself into a Jew and her father into a Nazi. She describes her father and herself equating the characters to the Holocaust. She tries to get the reader to understand the oppressor/oppressed dynamic that she and her father had. Another aspect of the poem is that Plath not only equates her father and herself to the victim and professor but she also includes German words and themes tying to the Holocaust throughout the piece.
Her father died when she was quite young but it could be argued that maybe he was dead to her already. The poem also relates to her former husband, Ted Hughes. It had been said that she was attracted to him because he was so similar to her father. "Daddy" was written in 1962, and from previous discussions in class, it has been noted that the Holocaust was not really spoken about until the 60s. This really speaks to me because Sylvia is saying that anyone can easily become part of an oppressed group, no matter how large or small. This is the case with any marginalized group; there is in actually nothing different about they just get singled out and targeted.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daddy_(poem)
Holly Robinson