YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Woolfs Orlando and Gender
Essays 31 - 60
been quoted as saying, "Probably nothing we had as children was quite so important to us as our summers in Cornwall...to hear the ...
satisfying sexual or intimate relationship because of it. She essentially lived a life wherein she was torn between the desire to ...
reader is not really sure about the couple until at one point the reader learns that the woman died "hundreds of years ago" and th...
of feminism: "Feminism articulates political opposition to the subordination of women as women, whether that subordination is ascr...
In six pages this paper discusses how Woolf's education and high social status influenced her views regarding working class women ...
point became critical to interpreting the story, and some authors such as Faulkner even began to tell stories from a multitude of ...
The stories being examined, by Chekhov and Mansfield, are clearly two stories that truly delve into the inner being of an individu...
community in Between the Acts fits with Nancys conceptualization of the interrupt of myth because Woolfs intention was to offer an...
In a paper of three pages, the writer looks at Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway". The bond of "insanity" between Clarissa and Septimus is ex...
This essay pertains to Woolf's novel and how the three main characters are presented within the context of the novel's main themes...
In five pages this tutorial essay considers Virginia Woolf's use of stream of consciousness in Mrs. Dalloway, T.S. Eliot's free ve...
on love, but rather an arrangement. This book sheds light on the cruelty of arranged marriages, but things get worse. It is not me...
In five pages the ways in which Woolf's novel represents recounting the author's own childhood through characterizations, events, ...
In 5 page this paper defines modernism and then critically applies the concept to T.S. Eliot's 'The Waste Land,' and 'Tradition an...
different ways. While both couples symbolize the bonds of matrimony in one way or another, it is not actually the marriage, in an...
In sixteen pages this paper discusses how duality and death are represented in the characterizations of Septimus Smith and Clariss...
In six pages this paper examines 20th century modernist literature in a consideration of such concepts as impressionism, postmoder...
"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...
the path to order by bringing structure to the process of understanding. The classical hero was one who was brave, honest, pious ...
increased recognition and familiarity for the strangeness to be lost....
death in The Great War. Unlike classical protagonists, Jacob exists not in the center of the action but always on the periphery (...
narrative practice. Woolfs essay "Modern Fiction" remains one of the main stays when describing writing using the modernist approa...
to resurrect and preserve (Gordon 4). Woolf, a manic-depressive, found herself constantly searching for approval...Battling with a...
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 ...
is basically no place for an intellectual woman within the university environment. On a visit to a university, Woolf is told she i...
silent trout are all lit up hanging, trembling. So she saw them; she heard them; but whatever they said had also this quality, as ...
and it is not until it attempts to fly against the pane again, that she notices something different about it. The moths movements ...
an intimate conversation among feminine equals. Men are excluded" (Marcus 79). She has, in essence, constructed an alternate fem...
which you are now for the first time entering?"(Woolf). And, even in the modern era, most women still find this to be a certainty,...
. . . for the perceived immorality of their personal lives" (McCoy & Harlan, 254). In addition to being extremely unconventional s...