This essay addresses Virginia Woolf’s exploration of the concept of the self through reference to a range of her prose writings. In these writings, Woolf questions whether the self is unitary, constant and finally knowable, or fragmented, unstable and inscrutable; whether the self is merged with other people, and constructed from interactions with the world; and whether or not a durable and fixed self-image is a necessary prerequisite for successful social interaction. Woolf’s engagement with the conventions of biography is examined primarily through the lens of two short stories: ‘The Lady in the Looking-Glass ’ and ‘An Unwritten Novel’. I argue in the first instance that Woolf’s concerns about ‘life-writing ’ are influenced both by the sp...
I will particularly examine the work of Virginia Woolf, the 20th century novelist and critic, princi...
The paper is an attempt to show Virginia Woolfs ‘struggle’ to make ordinary (life, be- ing and langu...
This paper examines narrative, biography, and selfhood in Virginia Woolf\u27s The Waves (1931). The ...
This essay addresses Virginia Woolf’s exploration of the concept of the self through reference to a ...
In my thesis I shall elaborate on how the self is constructed in Modernism. Based on Virginia Woolf’...
This article examines some important historical, literary, and theoretical questions that are posed ...
In the last few decades, considerable critical attention has been devoted to exploring the multiple ...
The principal concerns of this thesis are the connections that Virginia Woolf made between writing, ...
Virginia Woolf’s novels posit a view of a self and world that is constantly in flux. This thesis exp...
Virginia Woolf’s literary output is characterised by remarkable homogeneity and coherence between ae...
Drawing on Jean-Luc Nancy’s insights into bodies as the place of existence, David Abram’s thinking o...
Woolf’s maturing as a writer was deeply influenced by her traumatic experiences in childhood, the (i...
In her timely contribution to revisionist approaches in modernist studies, Lorraine Sim offers a rea...
No study of Virginia Woolf can do justice to the complexity of her life and work without taking into...
Virginia Woolf's writing is aesthetically complex, politically engaged, and remains relevant today—a...
I will particularly examine the work of Virginia Woolf, the 20th century novelist and critic, princi...
The paper is an attempt to show Virginia Woolfs ‘struggle’ to make ordinary (life, be- ing and langu...
This paper examines narrative, biography, and selfhood in Virginia Woolf\u27s The Waves (1931). The ...
This essay addresses Virginia Woolf’s exploration of the concept of the self through reference to a ...
In my thesis I shall elaborate on how the self is constructed in Modernism. Based on Virginia Woolf’...
This article examines some important historical, literary, and theoretical questions that are posed ...
In the last few decades, considerable critical attention has been devoted to exploring the multiple ...
The principal concerns of this thesis are the connections that Virginia Woolf made between writing, ...
Virginia Woolf’s novels posit a view of a self and world that is constantly in flux. This thesis exp...
Virginia Woolf’s literary output is characterised by remarkable homogeneity and coherence between ae...
Drawing on Jean-Luc Nancy’s insights into bodies as the place of existence, David Abram’s thinking o...
Woolf’s maturing as a writer was deeply influenced by her traumatic experiences in childhood, the (i...
In her timely contribution to revisionist approaches in modernist studies, Lorraine Sim offers a rea...
No study of Virginia Woolf can do justice to the complexity of her life and work without taking into...
Virginia Woolf's writing is aesthetically complex, politically engaged, and remains relevant today—a...
I will particularly examine the work of Virginia Woolf, the 20th century novelist and critic, princi...
The paper is an attempt to show Virginia Woolfs ‘struggle’ to make ordinary (life, be- ing and langu...
This paper examines narrative, biography, and selfhood in Virginia Woolf\u27s The Waves (1931). The ...