Anne Sexton became one of the best known of the often-controversial Confessional poets. Anne Sexton wrote openly about menstruation, incest, adultery, and drug addiction at a time when these topics were forbidden in poetry. There's possibly no other American in our time that has cried aloud publicly so many private details. In additional to focusing upon her emotional life, Sexton's later work includes frequent allusions to mythology, fairy tales, and Christian motifs, and explores such topics as romantic love, motherhood, and relationships between the sexes. So, Anne Sexton uses twisted metaphors and similes, symbolic images, and vivid colors to tell about her transformed poems.
By using twisted metaphors and similes as a technique in her writing, Sexton transforms her poems to be anything but the ordinary. Using metaphors in "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" contribute to the breezy contemporary sound. In addition, nearly every line of this quote uses simile or metaphors to develop them and tone: "No matter what life you lead/ the virgin is a lovely number:/ cheeks as fragile as cigarette paper, arms and legs made of Limoges, lips like Vin Du Rhone, rolling her china-blue doll eyes/ open and shut."(Sexton Trans. Pg3) This other twisted metaphor depicts theme and tone for the "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." "Her stepmother, a beauty in her own right, though eaten of course, by age, would hear of no beauty surpassing her own. Beauty is a simple passion." (Sexton Trans. Pg3) In "In Celebration of My Uterus" as one of the few poems in which a woman has come to the fact as a symbol, the center after many years of silence and taboo that is delineation of femaleness so fanatical that it makes one wonder. "Everyone in one is a bird. I am beating all my wings. They wanted to cut you out/ but they will not. They said you were immeasurably empty/ but you are not/...