YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Virginia Woolfs Writings and the Agenda of Womens Rights
Essays 1 - 30
. . . for the perceived immorality of their personal lives" (McCoy & Harlan, 254). In addition to being extremely unconventional s...
and mother. Nor does she seem to have regretted that - basically, she had no choice in the matter. Mr. Ramsay...
are locked out of the creative heart of society is addressed quite literally by Woolf in her first chapter. The narrator is medita...
Ramsay is not really a monster, but he is an autocrat who is cold and so detached from his family that he doesnt seem to realize h...
to resurrect and preserve (Gordon 4). Woolf, a manic-depressive, found herself constantly searching for approval...Battling with a...
to dehumanize both the invader and the invaded to the extent that the value of human life is lost(Phillips 123). Phillips ...
(Woolf, 2002). Written for a largely female readership over a hundred years after Wollstonecraft, Woolf can afford to be more cri...
is basically no place for an intellectual woman within the university environment. On a visit to a university, Woolf is told she i...
This paper examines Virginia Woolf's feminist ideology in her various novels and essays. The author contends that Woolf believed ...
Virginia Woolf's 1928 novel is the focus of attention here. Gender is discussed in this context. Woolf seems to claim that gende...
property holders voted from 1691 to 1780. The Continental Congress debated the woman-suffrage movement question at length, decidi...
nothing. She is not arrogantly assuming she is a great success, but rather sucking the listener/reader into a position where they ...
both in regard to the societal events and circumstances in which Virginia Woolf was embroiled and in regard to contemporary societ...
breakdown" (Anonymous Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), 2002; vwoolf.htm). After the serious tragedies is when her writing truly began, ...
"exciting, gripping story of crime and bloodshed" (Anonymous PG) leaves the reader with many unanswered questions, which only serv...
the most important elements of modernist literature is that which involves perspective. With modernist literature this involves "t...
Complex inner feelings and emotions as conveyed by modernist authors Thomas Mann and Virginia Woolf are compared and contrasted al...
on love, but rather an arrangement. This book sheds light on the cruelty of arranged marriages, but things get worse. It is not me...
increased recognition and familiarity for the strangeness to be lost....
be possible to establish what is absolute truth, and that the only way in which she can proceed with her exploration into women an...
In five pages this tutorial essay considers Virginia Woolf's use of stream of consciousness in Mrs. Dalloway, T.S. Eliot's free ve...
In six pages this paper examines 20th century modernist literature in a consideration of such concepts as impressionism, postmoder...
In 5 page this paper defines modernism and then critically applies the concept to T.S. Eliot's 'The Waste Land,' and 'Tradition an...
In a paper consisting of 7 pages social class as it is represented in the intellectualism of Tom Stoppard's Arcadia and the femini...
In sixteen pages this paper discusses how duality and death are represented in the characterizations of Septimus Smith and Clariss...
"what she loved was this, here, now, in front of her, the fat lady in the cab . . . Did it matter that she must inevitably cease c...
narrative practice. Woolfs essay "Modern Fiction" remains one of the main stays when describing writing using the modernist approa...
The Voyage Out would be published, followed by Night and Day, and Jacobs Room, which was based in part on the life of her beloved ...
satisfying sexual or intimate relationship because of it. She essentially lived a life wherein she was torn between the desire to ...
been quoted as saying, "Probably nothing we had as children was quite so important to us as our summers in Cornwall...to hear the ...