Virginia Woolf, Modernity and History

Virginia Woolf, Modernity and History
Author :
Publisher : Springer
Total Pages : 249
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780230250444
ISBN-13 : 0230250440
Rating : 4/5 (44 Downloads)

Synopsis Virginia Woolf, Modernity and History by : Angeliki Spiropoulou

This book analyses the representation of the past and the practice of historiography in the fiction and critical writings of Virginia Woolf, and draws parallels between Woolf's historiographical imagination and the thought of Walter Benjamin, the German philosopher of history and key theorist of modernity.

Virginia Woolf, Fashion and Literary Modernity

Virginia Woolf, Fashion and Literary Modernity
Author :
Publisher : Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages : 192
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780748641567
ISBN-13 : 0748641564
Rating : 4/5 (67 Downloads)

Synopsis Virginia Woolf, Fashion and Literary Modernity by : R. S. Koppen

Virginia Woolf, Fashion and Literary Modernity places WoolfA's writing in the context of sartorial practice from the Victorian period to the 1930s, and theories of dress and fashion from Thomas Carlyle to Walter Benjamin, Wyndham Lewis and J.C. Flugel. Bringing together studies in fashion, body culture and modernism, the book explores the modern fascination with sartorial fashion as well as with clothes as objects, signs, things, and embodied practice.Fashion was deeply implicated with the nineteenth-century modern and remained in focus for the modernities that continued to be proclaimed in the early decades of the following century. Clothing connects with the modernist topoi of the threshold, the trace and the interface; it is the place where character becomes image and where relations between subject and object, organic and inorganic play themselves out in a series of encounters and ruptures. Clothes also facilitate explorations in modern materialism, for instance as informing surrealist attempts to think the materiality of things outside the system of commodities and their fetishisation. WoolfA's work as cultural analyst and writer of fiction provides illuminating illustrations of all of these aspects, "e;thinking through clothes"e; in representations of the present, investigations of the archives of the past, and projections for the future.Key Features: *Contributes new research to Woolf and Modernism studies*Explores the significance of textual representations of dress and sartorial fashion in modernist literature *Interdisciplinary approach which brings together studies of fashion, culture and literature*Adds a specific author focused analysis to current work on cultural embodiment and performance

Virginia Woolf's Rooms and the Spaces of Modernity

Virginia Woolf's Rooms and the Spaces of Modernity
Author :
Publisher : Springer
Total Pages : 232
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783319719092
ISBN-13 : 3319719092
Rating : 4/5 (92 Downloads)

Synopsis Virginia Woolf's Rooms and the Spaces of Modernity by : Suzana Zink

This book provides a fascinating account of rooms in selected works by Virginia Woolf. Casting them as spaces which are at once material, textual and emotional, the volume shows Woolf’s rooms to be consistently connected to wider geographies of modernity and therefore central to her writing of gender, class, empire and the nation. The discussion moves “in and out of rooms,” from the focus on travel in Woolf’s debut novel, to the archival function of built space and literary heritage in Night and Day, the university as a male space of learning in Jacob’s Room, the iconic A Room of One’s Own and its historical readers, interior space as spatial history in The Years, and rooms as loci of memory in her unfinished memoir. Zink masterfully shows the spatial formation of rooms to be at the heart of Woolf’s interweaving of the political and the aesthetic, revealing an understanding of space as dynamic and relational.

Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-garde

Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-garde
Author :
Publisher : Columbia University Press
Total Pages : 450
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780231508780
ISBN-13 : 0231508786
Rating : 4/5 (80 Downloads)

Synopsis Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-garde by : Christine Froula

Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde traces the dynamic emergence of Woolf's art and thought against Bloomsbury's public thinking about Europe's future in a period marked by two world wars and rising threats of totalitarianism. Educated informally in her father's library and in Bloomsbury's London extension of Cambridge, Virginia Woolf came of age in the prewar decades, when progressive political and social movements gave hope that Europe "might really be on the brink of becoming civilized," as Leonard Woolf put it. For pacifist Bloomsbury, heir to Europe's unfinished Enlightenment project of human rights, democratic self-governance, and world peace—and, in E. M. Forster's words, "the only genuine movement in English civilization"— the 1914 "civil war" exposed barbarities within Europe: belligerent nationalisms, rapacious racialized economic imperialism, oppressive class and sex/gender systems, a tragic and unnecessary war that mobilized sixty-five million and left thirty-seven million casualties. An avant-garde in the twentieth-century struggle against the violence within European civilization, Bloomsbury and Woolf contributed richly to interwar debates on Europe's future at a moment when democracy's triumph over fascism and communism was by no means assured. Woolf honed her public voice in dialogue with contemporaries in and beyond Bloomsbury— John Maynard Keynes and Roger Fry to Sigmund Freud (published by the Woolfs'Hogarth Press), Bertrand Russell, T. S. Eliot, E. M. Forster, Katherine Mansfield, and many others—and her works embody and illuminate the convergence of aesthetics and politics in post-Enlightenment thought. An ambitious history of her writings in relation to important currents in British intellectual life in the first half of the twentieth century, this book explores Virginia Woolf's narrative journey from her first novel, The Voyage Out, through her last, Between the Acts.

The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf

The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 299
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780521896948
ISBN-13 : 0521896940
Rating : 4/5 (48 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf by : Susan Sellers

A revised and fully updated edition, featuring five new chapters reflecting recent scholarship on Woolf.

On Or about December 1910

On Or about December 1910
Author :
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Total Pages : 304
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0674636066
ISBN-13 : 9780674636064
Rating : 4/5 (66 Downloads)

Synopsis On Or about December 1910 by : Peter Stansky

Peter Stansky paints a picture of the changing world in which the Bloomsbury set moved as the watershed to a new and more open society where for example E.M. Forster could write about love between men, and new artforms were in full bloom.

Virginia Woolf's Essayism

Virginia Woolf's Essayism
Author :
Publisher : Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages : 163
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780748656226
ISBN-13 : 0748656227
Rating : 4/5 (26 Downloads)

Synopsis Virginia Woolf's Essayism by : Randi Saloman

Explores the way Woolf used essay-writing techniques to develop her own conception of the modern novel. This book forcuses on Woolf's vast output of essays and their relation to her fiction. Saloman shows that it was by employing tools and methods drawn f

Satiric Modernism

Satiric Modernism
Author :
Publisher : Liverpool University Press
Total Pages : 288
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781949979909
ISBN-13 : 1949979903
Rating : 4/5 (09 Downloads)

Synopsis Satiric Modernism by : Kevin Rulo

In this book, Kevin Rulo reveals the crucial linkages between satire and modernism. He shows how satire enables modernist authors to evaluate modernity critically and to explore their ambivalence about the modern. Through provocative new readings of familiar texts and the introduction of largely unknown works, Satiric Modernism exposes a larger satiric mentality at work in well-known authors like T.S. Eliot, James Joyce, Wyndham Lewis, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, and Ralph Ellison and in less studied figures like G.S. Street, the Sitwells, J.J. Adams, and Herbert Read, as well as in the literature of migration of Sam Selvon and John Agard, in the films of Paolo Sorrentino, and in the drama of Sarah Kane. In so doing, Rulo remaps the last hundred years as an era marked distinctively by a new kind of satiric critique of and aesthetic engagement with the temporal fissures, logics, and regimes of modernity. This ambitious, expansive study reshapes our understanding of modernist literary history and will be of interest to scholars of twentieth century and contemporary literature as well as of satire.

The Oxford Handbook of Virginia Woolf

The Oxford Handbook of Virginia Woolf
Author :
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Total Pages : 689
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780198811589
ISBN-13 : 0198811586
Rating : 4/5 (89 Downloads)

Synopsis The Oxford Handbook of Virginia Woolf by : Anne E. Fernald

A Handbook on Woolf's achievements as an innovative novelist and pioneering feminist theorist. It studies her life, her works, her relationships with other writers, her professional career, and themes in her work including among others feminism, sexuality, education, and class.

Manhattan Transfer

Manhattan Transfer
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 420
Release :
ISBN-10 : UCSC:32106012931710
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (10 Downloads)

Synopsis Manhattan Transfer by : John Dos Passos

SC-SPCOLL (copy 1): From the James and Margaret Beveridge Fonds.