Virginia Woolf

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Standard Name: Woolf, Virginia
Birth Name: Adeline Virginia Stephen
Nickname: Ginia
Married Name: Adeline Virginia Woolf
Thousands of readers over three or four generations have known that Virginia Woolf was—by a beadle—denied access to the library of a great university. They may have known, too, that she was a leading intellect of the twentieth century. If they are feminist readers they will know that she thought . . . back through her mothers and also sideways through her sisters and that she contributed more than any other in the twentieth century to the recovery of women's writing.
Marcus, Jane. “Introduction”. New Feminist Essays on Virginia Woolf, edited by Jane Marcus, Macmillan, p. i - xx.
xiv
Educated in her father's library and in a far more than usually demanding school of life, she radically altered the course not only of the English tradition but also of the several traditions of literature in English.
Froula, Christine. Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde. Columbia University Press.
2
She wrote prodigiously—nine published novels, as well as stories, essays (including two crucial books on feminism, its relation to education and to war), diaries, letters, biographies (both serious and burlesque), and criticism. As a literary journalist in a wide range of forums, she addressed the major social issues of her time in more than a million words.
Woolf, Virginia. “Introduction; Editorial Note”. The Essays of Virginia Woolf, edited by Andrew McNeillie, Hogarth Press, pp. vols. 1 - 4: various pages.
ix
She left a richly documented life in words, inventing a modern fiction, theorising modernity, writing the woman into the picture. She built this outstandingly influential work, which has had its impact on both writing and life, on her personal experience, and her fictions emerge to a striking degree from her life, her gender, and her moment in history. In a sketch of her career written to Ethel Smyth she said that a short story called An Unwritten Novelwas the great discovery . . . . That—again in one second—showed me how I could embody all my deposit of experience in a shape that fitted it.
Woolf, Virginia. The Letters of Virginia Woolf. Editors Nicolson, Nigel and Joanne Trautmann, Hogarth Press.
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Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Features Ursula K. Le Guin
The first essay, Space Crone, takes the menopause as topic. Le Guin revisits the vexed question of the gendering of language: the father tongue, the mother tongue, the effort expended to keep the literary...
Textual Features Ketaki Kushari Dyson
KKD illuminates the relationship between Tagore and Ocampo, which began in 1924 when Tagore moved to Buenos Aires to write for the daily La Nación, but her main aim is to recuperate Victoria Ocampo...
Textual Features Anna Letitia Barbauld
She strikes a newly bold, almost an insurrectionary note here, calling upon revolutionary France, indeed, to provide a model. [W]hatever is corrupted must be lopt away, she writes, as people assert their long forgotten...
Textual Features Elizabeth Robins
This wide-ranging and somewhat disjointed work, explicitly addressed to women (These pages are not addressed to the masculine mind),
Robins, Elizabeth. Ancilla’s Share. Hyperion Press.
47
sets out the dangers of assuming that gender equality has now been achieved...
Textual Features Sylvia Plath
Plath took the idea for her meditative voices from Woolf 's The Waves. Her women speak from a maternity ward, where their experience of motherhood is mixed and their emotions tumultuous, to say the...
Textual Features Ethel Sidgwick
Though she calls her work a memoir, ES spends only twenty-six pages writing about Eleanor Sidgwick's childhood, and gives much of the text to the history of Newnham, before as well as during her aunt's...
Textual Features Alice Meynell
The title essay links the colour of life to the weight, density, and lushness of the body and its skin. AM writes that the true colour of life is not red. . . . The...
Textual Features Gillian Allnutt
In the poemWhy NotGA ponders the relationship between women's writing, the ambiguity of language, and the seduction of suicide. The speaker (presumably GA ) imaginatively places herself in the subject-position of Virginia Woolf
Textual Features Winifred Holtby
Like Holtby's first novel, South Riding is set in Yorkshire. Some places in the story are identifiable in life, as Kingsport is a version of Hull. The style is realistic, a rejection of...
Textual Features Maggie Gee
This lecture deals with various ways of being silenced: particularly, though not only, for her own gender and her own nationality. The English, she says, tend to fall silent in face of a long list...
Textual Features Simone de Beauvoir
SB 's next novel, Tous les hommes sont mortels, 1946 (translated into English as All Men Are Mortal, 1954), features, like Woolf 's Orlando, a protagonist who is immortal, living on from...
Textual Features George Orwell
This is one of the several pieces in which Orwell champions the middlebrow or non-art writing. His supreme example
Orwell, George. The Penguin Essays of George Orwell. Penguin in association with Secker and Warburg.
326
of the kind of book that has no literary pretensions but which remains readable when...
Textual Features Adrienne Rich
These poems abandon AR 's former regular metres for free verse, as they abandon decorum for outspoken personal expression about the struggle necessary to be a thinking woman rather than a good girl.
O’Mahoney, John. “Poet and Pioneer: Adrienne Rich”. The Guardian, pp. Review 20 - 3.
22
Textual Features E. M. Forster
This novel is remarkable for its witty treatment of the philosophical conundrum of the material reality of objects (later touched on by Virginia Woolf in To the Lighthouse) and its glorification of the chalk...
Residence Stella Benson
SB returned from China to England to receive the Femina Vie Hereuse prize for Tobit Transplanted. During the voyage she read Virginia Woolf 's The Waves.
Grant, Joy. Stella Benson: A Biography. Macmillan.
290-1
Scott, Bonnie Kime. Refiguring Modernism. Indiana University Press.
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