Managed the Wrong Hand 1950s Rape Culture in The Bell Jar Fancifully named a novel kept to the unquenchable hunger of psychological sickness, The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath genuinely investigates the cultural ills in the job of young ladies during the 1950s. Notwithstanding the inescapable and widespread acknowledgment of inner hardship, The Bell Jar's fundamental character, Esther Greenwood, is additionally confronted with authoritative, essential physical savagery. A youthful, brilliant lady during the 1950s, Esther is troubled while experiencing the chance of being assaulted. The close assault scene, while vicious, represents a few gadgets in Plath's semi-personal novel; in addition, it capacities to speak to a more profound issue instead of essentially grandstand the particular viciousness of Esther's situation. Plath deliberately built the scene's subtleties, phrasing, and portrayal to uncover topical significance and cultural issues through character savagery.