Wuolah Free U5 Lit3
Wuolah Free U5 Lit3
Wuolah Free U5 Lit3
Claire98
Facultad de Filología
Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Tales of The City
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
As the story continues, pointed contrasts are made impoverished realities of her life.
Romance is shown as dangerous because it covers over the real (economic and sexual)
causes of Rosabel’s dream, we find that it powerfully affirms the value of the life of the
female body, and indeed celebrates it. Rosabel’s dream world offers her light, warmth,
colour, and sexual pleasure:
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Mansfield’s text discloses the way in which popular romance, speaks powerfully to other
female needs, pleasures, and desires. The text points in two directions and dramatizes
the dilemma in which Mansfield finds herself as a woman writer of the period. On the
other hand she is pulled towards a ‘masculine’ writing position that foregrounds such
qualities as authority and autonomy, and the opportunities offered by it. The solution to
this dilemma, is to push modernism to the limit and attempt to deconstruct this opposition.
Women modernists tried to incorporate into their writing what they felt constituted their
femininity. In this sense, women writers of the period challenged the claim of
impersonality defended by the male writers, turned to personal experience, and in their
writings, they made a journey in search of a self that was perceived as multiple and
fragmented.
Central to the rise of modernism and its questioning of reality as portrayed in Victorian
and Edwardian fiction is the development of science in the late nineteenth century. Of
Virginia Woolf is a major figure in the Modernist movement. She made significant
contributions in the development of the novel and in the writing of essays. Given the
amount of material, her diaries and letters collected in several volumes, the biographies
she has inspired and thousands of critical works that have focused on her persona and
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
work, it requires effort to establish a complete and fixed picture of this woman of letters.
The fact that seems clear is that Virginia Woolf was a complex and paradoxical woman
whose unconventional personality is difficult to pin down. Adeline Virginia Stephen was
born on 25 January 1882 in London. Her beautiful mother, Julia Prinsep Duckworth
Stephen, had three children from a previous marriage to the barrister. Virginia Woolf
inherited her mother’s looks and Julia would be the inspiration for Mrs Ramsay in To the
Lighthouse. Leslie Stephen, her father, was also a widower. From this marriage he had
a daughter, Laura, who was mentally handicapped. In addition to Virginia, Julia and
Leslie Stephen had three other children: Vanessa, Thoby and Adrian. All eight children
lived with her parents and a number of servants at 22 Hyde Park Gate, Kensington, in
London.
The Stephen family belonged to the upper-middle class that produced most of the
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Her elder brother, Thoby, left public school in 1899 and went up to Trinity College,
Cambridge. Greek was also important because it was a subject, she could share with
Thoby, who also brought to Hyde Park Gate the atmosphere of undergraduate life in
Cambridge. It was there that Thoby made friends with Leonard Woolf, Clive Bell, Saxon
Sydney-Turner, Lytton Strachey, and Maynard Keynes. They comprised the embryo of
what came to be called the ‘Bloomsbury Group’.
At the end of 1904 Virginia Woolf started writing reviews for the Manchester Guardian
and in 1905 she started reviewing for the Times Literary Supplement. In 1906, after a
trip to Greece, Thoby died of typhoid fever. He had started the ‘Thursday evenings’
meetings for his Cambridge friends. The arrangement was continued by Vanessa and
then, after Vanessa’s marriage, by Virginia and Adrian when they moved to 29 Fitzroy
Square. Woolf was to move again in 1911, a year before she married Leonard Woolf.
From then onwards the Woolfs rented a small house near Lewes in Sussex. Her sister
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
and social underpinning.
The 1930s was an unhappy time for the Woolfs as the deaths of friends and the prospect
of war increasingly overshadowed the decade. Virginia wrote a fictional biography of
Elizabeth Barret Browning’s dog entitled Flush in 1933. In 1937 she published The Years,
perhaps her most overtly political fictional work. A best-seller in America, the novel was
a long and painful exercise in writing. It is often read alongside Three Guineas, a
successor to A Room of One’s Own although it is more revolutionary in its view. The
essay deals extensively with the relationship between war, masculinity, and women’s
education and employment. In 1940 she wrote a biography of her friend Roger Fry. On
28 March 1941 she killed herself while she was in the last revision of her final novel
Between the Acts posthumously published by Leonard Woolf.
When the Stephen children moved to 46 Gordon Square in 1904, Thoby started to
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
In different forms, these strands of Moore's argument can be traced in Woolf’s writing.
For instance, in The Voyage Out Richard Dalloway reads: «Good, then, is indefinable»
from the «black volume of philosophy» that Helena Ambrose is reading.
Moore's method of analysis is behind Woolf’s description of their meetings as «piling
stone upon stone» the arguments and her final ironic comments of not being sure which
one is the conclusion of the discussion.
The interesting aspect here is to be aware that what is important is not so much to arrive
at a definite conclusion, but the method employed. The journey is important, not the
arrival.
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Moore’s radical philosophy appealed to Bloomsbury for its rationalism, and its elevation
of aesthetic life, claiming that «the most valuable states of mind are those we associate
with the contemplation of beauty, love and truth». In a sense, Moore’s rationalism, his
optimistic view of human nature and his willingness to question received notions, as well
as his idea of emotions appropriate to specific objects, were so strongly associated with
Bloomsbury’s own set of ideals that the connection between the philosopher and the
Group seems natural.
It’s through Moore, that the Bloomsbury Group became interested in psychoanalysis and
Freud’s work. In Rieff’s view, Moore opens the path into Freud in his last chapter of
Principia Ethica. Frankness and as introspection in matters of sexuality were hallmarks
of the Bloomsbury Group. In this sense, the group’s interest on ‘the new psychology’,
comes as no surprise. Yet, the view of this set towards the unconscious, sexuality, and
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
magnitude and importance of Woolf’s material. After Leonard Woolf’s death in 1969
several selections of non-fiction volumes were edited, including Books and Portraits, and
Michèle Barret's Women and Writing. Andrew McNeille in 1986 started his edition of
WooIf’s essays, The Essays of Virginia Woolf. The first three volumes of the six volumes
that were to constitute his edition were published between 1986 and 1988. The fourth
and, as yet last volume was published in 1994. The two final volumes are yet to come.
McNeille's masterly editions provide a fully annotated chronological order allowing the
study of the essays as a whole, enabling critics to discern their significance to the full
and also their relationship to her better-known works. In relatively recent years
publications such as Rachel Bowlby's A Woman’s Essays and The Crowed Dance of
Modem Life provide an approach to a selection of Woolf’s essays that still constitutes a
good reference to discerning the significance of Virginia Woolf’s essay writing.
As can be seen in this quotation, Woolf discusses the nature of the essay in terms of
aesthetics which are precisely «the features expected to go with literature». In this sense,
Woolf wrote most of her essays with this pleasure principle in sight.
The length of the essays also varies, ranging from the short literally reviews she wrote
for journals, o book-length pieces such as A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas.
Many of the longer essays dealt with authors, from the past who became subjects of
essays from different sources. In these essays she could feel more at ease because she
had more room and a greater perspective. Her writings about literary history show that
she preferred certain periods, such as classical Greece, the Elizabethan period,
eighteenth century literature, the Romantics, or nineteenth-century Russian fiction.
Authors she favoured were Daniel Defoe, James Boswell, Laurence Sterne, Jane
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
encapsulate what she saw as the task of the artist: the recording of reality.
Essays such as 'Modem Fiction' or 'Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown' argue against traditional
forms of fiction writing defended by her contemporary generation of writers such as H.G.
Wells, Arnold Bennett and John Galsworthy whom she calls «materialists». These writers
were too closely concerned with realism and themes chosen for their novels, were too
closely concerned with realism and, as a consequence, left the conventional form of
fiction-writing unchanged. By a static approach to the traditional structure of fiction, these
writers are unable to portray reality because they bypass 'life' which is «a luminous halo,
a semi-transparent envelope surrounding us from the beginning of consciousness to the
end». According to Woolf fiction must reflect reality by obstructing flan ordinary mind on
an ordinary day». If the writer dares to do so, he or she will be confronted with the fact
that «the mind receives a myriad of impressions, trivial, fantastic, evanescent or
engraved with the sharpness of steel». By breaking the traditional structure of the novel,
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
James Joyce, Lytton Strachey, E.M. Forster, and T. S. Eliot.
Some critics have argued that this year, 1910, saw the opening of Roger Fry's strongly
criticised exhibition of Post-Impressionist paintings, a term coined by Fry himself. The
show entitled 'Manet and The Post-Impressionists’, introduced Cézanne, Gauguin,
Signac and Van Gogh to the public in London: it also included works by such
contemporary artists as Picasso, Matisse, and Derain. The most widely criticised feature
of the exhibition was the shocking impact of the spectacular colours used in the paintings,
viewed by the outraged critics as a primitivistic and unnatural use of colour.
February of the same year is also significant in the personal life of Virginia Woolf because
of what has come to be known as the ‘Dreadnought hoax’. For this ‘massive practical
joke’ Woolf blackened her face, dressed in a caftan and a turban, and wore a beard and
a moustache to impersonate the Emperor of Abyssinia. Her colleagues impersonated
the Emperor’s entourage and a delegation of British diplomats. The group went as far as
to mock-inspect H.M.S. Dreadnought, the most important warship in the British Royal
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
A few lines down Woolf pushes this uneasiness further and ponders about the possible
meanings that ‘women and fiction’ might have. In doing so she trespasses on another
line of the traditional conventions. She confesses that she will never be able to «fulfil
what is… the first duty of a lecturer» because she will display a most unconventional
discursive practice based on her opinion that «a woman must have money and a room
of her own is she is to write fiction».
Already, the irony and witticism present in the text can be observed. The reassuring
action of jotting down some notes of ‘pure truth’ from a lecture, in the way we all do when
attending such an event, is mocked by the very fact that those notes will remain for ever
‘on the mantelpiece’. Once more, the ambiguity in Woolf’s words may not pass
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
unnoticed. If at first sight these words appear to mean that this ‘pure truth’ will indeed be
preserved, it might also be the case that the notes are placed on the mantelpiece and
are never looked at again; in this latter circumstance, she is showing the pointlessness
of ever writing them. Woolf’s method is redolent of the discussions she witnessed on
“Thursday evening’ in Bloomsbury. By an expository argument of how she arrived at the
conclusion about money and a room in connection with writing and women, it is expected
that the reader will actively engage in the argument, participating intellectually, rather
than simply being a mere and passive recipient of some preconceived and opinionated
assumptions. The most interesting aspect of the essay is its suggestive quality, calling
for as many different responses as it has readers.
In order to be on a level with her audience and to allow the intellectual rhapsody to take
place, Woolf puts into practice a device that constituted another breaking of the
The phallic shadow prevents the text from providing pleasure to the ‘I’ that is bored and
that is «only a convenient term for somebody who has no real being». On a deeper level
the ‘I’ who has no real existence is not portrayed as a celebratory ‘I’ as some critics have
claimed to see in it the determination on formation of a women’s society. The ‘I’ who has
no real existence is an inquiring ‘I’ trying to solve the enigma of the «true nature of woman
and the true nature of fiction». The inclusion of a different ‘I’ in the discourse challenges
the notion of the unified homogeneous identity held by patriarchal discourse. Precisely
by confronting the ‘I’ (who bores me) with an ‘I’ that (as yet) has no real existence the
very notion of identity is displaced.
It’s important to highlight the fact that Woolf starts challenging a monolithic notion of
identity precisely by posing arts challenging a monolithic notion of identity precisely by
posing, right from the beginning of her essay, the question of the possibility of an
‘unknown’ ‘I’. The statement of the existence of this ‘unknown’ ‘I’ is given within a textual
context in which ‘I’ seems obsessively present. In the opening lines of A Room of One’s
Own, ‘I’ is scattered in sentences and intermingled with other pronouns such as ‘you’
and ‘they’. Suddenly, when the meaning of the title ‘women and fiction’ is being
pondered, the rhythm is changed, by the appearance of a series of sentences containing
solely the first-person singular pronoun:
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
fictitious world.
By diminishing the importance of the name of the narrator 'I', Woolf is minimising the
importance of an authoritarian voice in the text. Yet, she insists upon a name, 'Mary
Beton, Mary Seton, Mary Carmichael' resolved by the end of the essay into «Mary
Beton». Precisely at this point of naming, the reader understands that the textual voice
is that of a woman, a vital piece of information in the subsequent development of Woolf’s
argument.
Moreover, Woolf is attempting to assemble an identity other than the one allocated to
women by patriarchal society. In this context, it is not by chance that the name of that ‘I’
is ‘Mary’. In Western Christian culture the name ‘Mary’ is immediately associated with
the Virgin. This name, repeated three times, marks the point of departure for Woolf’s
examination of female identity and the production of writing. As is already known, the
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
In order to write this experience Mary Carmichael will have to find a language that has
never been used before. The quotation above seems to imply that the position in
language for which Woolf is searching is a ‘lesbian’ one, an inference reinforced by her
reference to Sir Chartres Biron, presiding over Radclyffe Hall’s trial for her lesbian novel
The Well of Loneliness. The interesting point here is that Mary Carmichael will be
breaking the silence of history. Woolf points out that the structure of language, as
transpires in some books, has served men «out of their own needs for their own uses».
However, language cannot just be invented. Time and experimentation are needed. It is
also important to refer to a network of writers who might have experienced the same
needs and noticed the same flaws in language. In this respect, tradition is a prerequisite,
so that any current generation of writers may learn from their predecessors and also
become a source of knowledge for further generations. As Woolf stated in a letter to the
editor of the New Statesman, the presence of a tradition was fundamental for
These conditions coincided for women writers in Sappho's Lesbos and then never again.
Since women writers' encounter with language is difficult, and language is perceived as
deficient when trying to express an experience felt as different, «it is useless to go to the
great men writers for help>>.
Woolf believes that women's writing is essentially different from men's writing. Having
said this, to state what is specific to women's writing and how women achieve this type
of writing poses a problem for her. As she herself argues:
In the context of these words her apparently contradictory warning, «It is fatal for anyone
who writes to think of their sex. It is fatal to be a man or woman pure and simple»,
becomes significant. Seemingly, Woolf is hesitant about her conviction relating to the
differences between women's and men’s writing. She is aware of the dangers of such a
postulate, which can tacitly imply a sense of biological determinism. She perceives that
patriarchy has used biologically determined theories to defend and to justify the
ideological superiority of men over women. For this reason she places great emphasis
on rejecting determinism. By questioning the meaning of ‘feminine’ she is hinting at the
possibly at the possibly that femininity might be a matter of representation.
Woolf encourages women to write because it’s only by writing that a new economy of
representation other than that made through the repression of the feminine can be
developed. Women’s representation, if achieved ‘unconsciously’, will escape the
economy of sameness that forms the foundations of patriarchal writing.
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Own is found in the last chapter when she says that the ideal state of mind in which to
produce art is an androgynous one:
Woolf’s account of the androgynous mind repudiates the idea of rejecting the feminine,
since it is important to the relationship between women and fiction that androgyny be
proposed as the ideal state of mind in which to produce art. She explicitly expresses her
fear that androgyny can be equated to man, as is the case with Freud’s theory of
bisexuality. In this sense she states, «It would be a thousand pities if women wrote like
men, or lived like men, or looked like men».
If the artist’s aim is to portray, she cannot afford to ignore the various perspectives from
which this reality can be observed. The artist should, through a state of mind that is
Mr Dalloway was published in 1925 and received much critical acclaim; it has now
become a ‘classic’. As a novel it broke with the pattern of the novel established at that
time. It is a different novel in themes, style and method of writing, an exploration in new
techniques, shifting continuously from one character to another, from past to present,
from one subject matter to a different one.
However, the plot of Mrs Dalloway is quite simple: one day in June in London, Clarissa
Dalloway is planning a party for the evening; Peter Walsh, her old suitor, returns to
England after five years in India; at the end of the day, Sally Seton, another old friend,
shows up unexpectedly at the party; the ex-soldier Septimus Warren Smith kills himself.
When a character starts thinking about one issue, he or she does not finish with it
completely, but it is forgotten and continued in the thoughts of another character. This
happens frequently, for example, with the remembrances of the summer that seems to
be the most important moment in the lives of Mrs Dalloway, Peter Walsh, and Sally.
Virginia Woolf designed universal characters as can be seen when she locates them in
the streets and parks of London. They are neither plain characters nor heroes nor
heroines; they are types: the housewife, the madman, the politician, the doctor, etc. One
of the main features in their presentation is that all through the book they «Are frequently
split between at least two times or two places and always questioning their ability to know
one another or themselves».
They’re also the alibi to present 'reality' through different individual consciousnesses.
One of the linking characters in this 'web' is Sir William Bradshaw, a friend of the
Dalloways and also Septimus's doctor. This metaphorical 'web' is made up of invisible
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
threads that connect all of those characters, otherwise unconnected into a common circle
of experience, regardless of their class. There are several examples of how the invisible
threads join but the clearest example occurs at the end. Here, Clarissa Dalloway hears
at the party about Septimus's madness and death, and she notices that she feels 'like
him'. This suggests an alignment between these two characters through a moment of
epiphany. At this moment Clarissa stands side-by-side with Septimus; this is just what
Woolf wanted to communicate when she started the novel. As she wrote in her diary:
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Woolf wrote «Mrs Dalloway has branched into a book» because she had written before
about Mr and Mrs Dalloway, and about Clarissa in particular in some short stories and in
the novel, The Voyage Out, where Clarissa appears as a minor character. In previous
writings Woolf had presented the couple in a harsher light than she did in Mrs Dalloway.
Similarly Richard Dalloway had appeared as a domineering and pompous personality
and Clarissa as dependent and superficial. But while these character's characteristics
remain in Mrs Dalloway, the two generally appear much more reasonable and likeable.
When one first takes the book and reads the title Mrs Dalloway, one may assume that
the story will be about the life of Clarissa Dalloway, as happens for example in Jane
Eyre, where the title corresponds exactly to the plot of the novel. But in this case, our
expectations are unfulfilled.
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
omniscient narrator can move from mind to mind and relate to the reader the thoughts
and feelings of any character. Time is used in a unique manner: the narrator relating the
story after the event has happened using the present tense. This repetition is achieved
by relating first the mind of one character and then the mind of another. In addition, one
character can relate what heIshe thinks to what another character is thinking.
According to Millet, there comes at this point a «general mind», unity as evidenced in
common images throughout the narrative. As a mode of transportation from one mind to
another, Woolf uses external objects for example, the aeroplane writing a brand name,
Kreemo, in the sky as «a man of transition». By repetition events from the past that are
brought up in many minds, as was for example, the summer when Clarissa met Richard
Dalloway, Woolf permits her narrator to remove the «usual boundaries between mind
and world».
Woolf chooses the latter, and what Lodge calls 'authorial participation in the discourse'
refers to the traditional omniscient narrator mentioned by Miller. Lodge is saying that in
the case of the interior monologue, what happens is that the reader feels as if there were
some kind of headphone plugged into the character's mind: what we hear is thus the
first-person narrator. In the case of Woolf (free indirect style), what happens is that there
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
often occupied her mind. In 1944 she committed suicide, leaving a note explaining that
she no longer wanted to live. Woolf originally planned lo have Clarissa die or commit
suicide at the end of the novel, yet finally decided that she did not want this ending for
Clarissa. By the end of the novel, however, Clarissa is so close to Septimus that in a way
she dies with him, for these two characters have been connected throughout the novel.
The world of madness is clearly represented by Septimus, the distinguished soldier,
slowly being killed by the lingering effects of the war: he is suffering from shell-shock
syndrome, an illness that affected many First World War veterans. Shell-shock syndrome
produced in its sufferers insistent, almost real-life, memories of the warm and a total loss
of feeling. Septimus feels he is living in an ongoing war and feels guilt for having sun
hoed it when so many have died. He worries that the war «taught him not to care» when
his superior officer was killed. He wants to die too. As with many other First World War
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Septimus is destroyed by the realities of the war, while society in general is in denial of
the repercussions. Lady Brutton's proposal of forcing surplus women to emigrate and to
populate the colonies, are presented as cruel and satirised. The political proposal of Sir
William Bradshaw, who turns Septimus into a ‘case’ to be transformed into a provision in
a Bill, is presented merely as dangerous.
One would think that in order to ‘criticize the social system’ Woolf would have wanted
serenity and distance, yet next question is «Am I writing The Hours [Mrs Dalloway] from
deep emotion? » This is because Woolf believed that, in order to convey ‘reality’, she
needed to write from her body and from her mind, to write against the heart. This is why
there is so much pain in the following sentence of the quotation: «Of course the mad part
tries me so much, makes my mind squirt so badly that I can hardly face spending the
next weeks at it. » The pain of recollection was too strong, Woolf suffered a serious
breakdown after writing the novel because emotionally she had invested too much in it:
indeed Leonard Woolf, her husband, and close friends compared her periods of insanity
to a manic depression quite similar to the episodes experienced by Septimus.
FULL ANALYSIS
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
A Room of One’s Own
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
A Room of One’s Own
Virginia Woolf
1928
October 1929
Modernism, Feminism
Feminism, Essay
The lectures were conceived by Woolf around the time that the law finally changed in
The narrator depicts a particular day in fictional university of Oxbridge, inspired by the
quadrangles and impassable lawns of Oxford and Cambridge.
Apart from her trip out of town to visit Oxbridge University and Fernham College, Mary
spends her time in London. But one major reason that London matters as a setting is
that it's teeming people and symbols. Even if Mary is just starting out the window at
leaves falling and people getting into taxicabs, she's soaking in the city and all that it
means.
Woolf speaks to the audience as herself but also sometimes assumes a first-person
narrator to describe the events of the days leading up to the lecture.
VIRGINIA WOOLF
Woolf is not a character in her lecture. But by creating a narrator to carry the bulk of her
lecture, she makes explicit her own role as author and creates a separation between
herself and the ideas of the narrator, and the importance of fiction in communicating inner
experience (since she relies on the narrator to communicate these ideas rather than
doing so herself). Woolf essentially introduces the narrator at the beginning of the lecture
and then takes over from the narrator at the end of the novel to provide closing remarks.
THE NARRATOR
To tell her story and make her argument, Woolf invents a narrator who she says could
be any woman, "call me Mary Beton, Mary Seton, Mary Carmichael or by any name you
please—it is not a matter of any importance," she says. This narrator guides the audience
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
by her family into an early marriage, she must escape to London to free herself to pursue
art but is turned away with scorn from every theatre she approaches. She becomes
pregnant, which makes a life of writing impossible, and she eventually kills herself. But
later in the essay, Woolf brings back the ghost of Judith Shakespeare and tells the young
women in the audience that they have the power to be the voice that Judith never had.
MARY BETON
She’s the narrator's aunt, whose death has afforded the narrator a generous allowance
of 500 pounds a year. The narrator lives very comfortably on this sum and financial
security has taught her a lot about the importance of money and why women have
suffered intellectual and creative poverty as well as material poverty.
MARY CARMICHAEL
To push back against male writers who claimed that women were born intellectually
inferior to men and to encourage women to make their living through writing.
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Woolf explores society how it is tilted, in two ways. First, she shows how she herself has
been shut out of the fictional college "Oxbridge", an amalgamation of the two elite English
universities Oxford and Cambridge. She creates an imaginary woman named Judith
Shakespeare, sister of William Shakespeare and his equal in talent. She then shows
how Judith is prevented by the structure of society from become an “incandescent” poet
and ends up committing suicide.
A Room of One's Own also examines the realm of female homosexuality, speaking
honestly about the possibility of a woman's affection for women. By putting this usually
silenced topic before her audience, she creates an atmosphere where feelings and
taboos are able to surface and be expressed and are able to become commonplace and
understood as a normal part of womanhood.
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
more universal argument about the nature of truth, which inevitably casts a shadow over
the points she makes. Woolf seems to realize two main points about the nature of truth
that she passes on to her audience.
The first point has to do with is subjectivity. As a lecturer, she says she hopes that her
listeners find some truth in what she is saying. She claims that all truth is a kind of
experience and is subjective. She hopes to impart something truthful by showing her
experience and perspective and, in doing so, perhaps the listener can deduce something
true. She goes about the essay in this vein, describing with an "I" voice the sensory and
mental processes of her day.
The second point is that the quest for truth connects her with both the women and men
in her story. As the narrator finds herself shut out of college buildings and women writers
absent on the library shelves, she observes the extent of the intellectual life around her
and in front of her in the form of the women of Newnham and Girton whom she is
addressing. Her pursuit of knowledge and her taste for debate and intellectual expression
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
A man interrupts Mary Beton's path across the grass. A bell interrupts her thoughts. A
restaurant check brings her contemplations back to the present. The essay's fictional
narrative is littered with distractions and interruptions. These constant interruptions
mimic the distractions and interruptions Woolf imagines must have been the reality for
writers such as Jane Austen as they sat in their sitting rooms and were called upon to
make conversation, rather than write uninterrupted in a room of their own. Woolf includes
these interruptions to symbolize the struggle of women writers, and the need for a private
space in which to write.
OXBRIDGE
Oxbridge University is the imaginary university that provides a setting for the Chapter 1
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
of the essay. Its magnificent buildings become a symbol of the legacy men have built
over many years. The wealth of generations of men built the chapel, placed in it lovely
stained-glass windows, and made sure it was filled with singers and scholars. Similarly,
the literature written by men was built up over time, from the earliest male writers through
English poet John Milton, Italian poet Dante Alighieri, and English playwright William
Shakespeare through the present. Male author built upon male author to bring about
great literature, as stone is set upon stone to build a chapel. Both kinds of "buildings"
require money. In contrast, women do not have a legacy of literature to draw upon
because they never had any money. Their colleges are plain and small compared to
Oxbridge, as is their literature. However, Woolf makes it clear the building blocks of
women's literature are finally being set in place. She ends on a hopeful note, encouraging
women to keep building.
Mrs Dalloway
Mrs Dalloway
Virginia Woolf
1922-24
1925
Mrs Dalloway takes place in June of 1923. World War I ended in 1918, and though the
United Kingdom was technically victorious in the war, hundreds of thousands of soldiers
died fighting and the country suffered huge financial losses. In 1922 much of Ireland
seceded from the United Kingdom, and many of Britain’s colonies would reach
independence in the decades following, including India, where Peter Walsh returns
from. Mrs Dalloway critiques the conservatism and traditionalism of the upper classes at
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
the time, while also portraying the tragedy of the “lost generation” following World War I,
like Septimus as a victim of PTSD.
Strictly defined, the point of view in Mrs Dalloway is third person omniscient; that means
there’s an overarching narrator who knows everything and who has access to everyone’s
thoughts.
The POV changes many times during the course of the novel, as we weave in and out
of the minds of Clarissa, Septimus, Lucrezia, Peter, Richard, Elizabeth, and Miss Kilman.
We have access to their thoughts and memories, which among the literary set is called
"free indirect discourse."
Setting is one of the most innovative aspects of Mrs Dalloway. The events of the story
take place on a Wednesday in June 1923 (most importantly, in post-World War I
London), all in one day. This choice to talk about just one day is very modernist and very
novel – pun intended. But because the characters are so haunted by the past, the reader
is taken away from London several times, and travels back in time to Bourton, to the
country home owned by Clarissa’s family.
Perhaps the most important setting in the novel is its historical setting. Taking place just
after World War I, we see that the effects of the war are still around, whether or not men
like Richard Dalloway acknowledge the scars left behind. Septimus went off to war
believing it would make him a hero; instead, he ends up a shadow of a man, traumatized
to the point of committing suicide. Even Clarissa as always abided by the strict patriarchal
social standards of British culture and thus misses out on the freedom she craves.
Throughout Mrs Dalloway, we see a self-destructive faith in the greatness of nation and
tradition at the expense of the individual.
CLARISSA DALLOWAY
The novel’s eponymous protagonist, a middle-aged, upper-class lady throwing a party.
Clarissa is married to the conservative politician Richard Dalloway but is deeply affected
by her past love for Sally Seton and her rejection of Peter Walsh, and she often dwells
on the past. Clarissa is sociable and loves life, especially the small moments and
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
death of his close friend and officer Evans, Septimus became unable to feel emotion. He
married Lucrezia while stationed in Milan. Septimus feels condemned by human nature
and is often suicidal and thinks that he has been condemned by the world to die for his
failure to feel. In his more intense hallucinations he imagines himself surrounded by
flames, or as a prophet with a divine message. Though the two characters never meet,
Clarissa and Septimus act as doubles in the novel.
PETER WALSH
Clarissa’s closest friend who was once passionately in love with her. They are
intellectually very similar, but always critical of each other. Clarissa rejected Peter’s
proposal of marriage, which has haunted him all his life. He lived in India for years and
often has romantic problems with women. Peter is critical of everyone, indulges in long
fantasies and musings, and constantly plays with his pocketknife.
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
Septimus fought for his country, but now the country is trying to pretend that the horrors
of war left no lasting traces on its soldiers.
The empty tradition and conservatism of the aristocracy is also shown in the characters
of Lady Bruton, Aunt Helena, and Hugh Whitbread, who have traditional values and
manners but are hopelessly removed from modern life. Richard works for the
Conservative Party, which is portrayed as outdated, stuffy, and soon to be replaced by
the Labour Party. The futility of classism and outdated conservatism culminates in the
figure of the Prime Minister. He is first mentioned as Peter’s critique of Clarissa and then
his “greatness” is discussed by people in the street, but when the Prime Minister actually
appears in person, he is ordinary and almost laughable. The Prime Minister belongs to
the old order of Empire, repression, and classism, which Woolf shows must be discarded
so that England can survive in the modern era.
TIME
Mrs. Dalloway takes place over the course of one day, and in its very framework Woolf
a64b0469ff35958ef4ab887a898bd50bdfbbe91a-3760536
pursuing younger women. Clarissa is also preoccupied with death even as she goes
about the business of enjoying life, making small talk, and throwing parties. In the parallel
characters of Septimus and Clarissa, Woolf shows two ways of dealing with the terror of
living one day – Clarissa affirms life by throwing a party, while Septimus offers his suicide
as an act of defiance and communication. These two characters never meet, but when
Clarissa hears about Septimus’s suicide she feels that she understands him.
TONE
What makes Mrs Dalloway so tricky in terms of tone is that Virginia Woolf has to wear
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
two hats. First, she has to capture a general tone of post-war life. A great example comes
at the beginning of the novel when Woolf writes: "For it was the middle of June. The War
was over, except for someone like Mrs Foxcroft at the Embassy last night eating her
heart out because that nice boy was killed and now the old Manor House must go to a
cousin […]". She sets up the mood with a tone of lightness and joy, relief and new
possibility, but then immediately turns it back to the horror of war. Just this one sentence
contains two totally different tones and suggests that the war cannot be easily forgotten:
it’s still haunting peoples’ daily lives years later.
Second, Woolf has to capture the tone of each character that takes a turn telling the
story. Without over-complicating her descriptions, she manages to move from Clarissa’s
delight with beauty to Peter’s feelings of nostalgia and regret; from Miss Kilman’s
murderous hatred to Septimus’ deep anxiety and visions of the walking dead.
FLOWERS
The first line of the book is Clarissa Dalloway saying she will “buy the flowers herself,”
and she soon enters a flower shop and marvels at the variety. Flowers are a traditional
symbol of love and femininity, but for Clarissa they also represent the joy and beauty that
can be found in everyday life. Woolf also uses the symbol in a more satirical sense as
well, as Elizabeth is compared to a flower by would-be suitors and Richard brings
Clarissa roses instead of saying “I love you.” Sally, the most rebellious female figure of
the book cut the heads off of flowers instead of cutting their stems, and Aunt Helena
found this “wicked.” This shows how Sally deals differently with femininity (flowers) than
is traditional to the older generation.
THE PRIME MINISTER
Mrs. Dalloway began as two different short stories, and one of them was called “The
Prime Minister.” In the novel the Prime Minister acts as a symbol of England’s traditional
No se permite la explotación económica ni la transformación de esta obra. Queda permitida la impresión en su totalidad.
BIG BEN
Big Ben is a famous clock tower and London monument, but it also serves as a symbol
of time and tradition in the book. The clock tower is part of the Palace of Westminster,
and in one way it acts as a symbol of English tradition and conservatism, the attempt to
pretend that the War and modern life haven’t changed anything. But Big Ben is also a
clock, and it dispassionately marks the endless progression of time, which waits for no
one. The striking of the clock is the main divider in the narrative of Mrs. Dalloway, and
interrupts characters’ thoughts and actions with “leaden circles dissolving in the air.”
Time is an important theme of the novel, as Clarissa and Septimus both feel the danger
of living even one day, and all the characters experience vibrant memories of the past.
The striking of Big Ben is then a continuous reminder of ever-present time, which is both
linear (the progression of hours) and circular (the constant presence of the past).