This project explores the way in which Virginia Woolf uses and subverts the classic nineteenthcentury genre, the Bildungsroman in her first novel (The Voyage Out) and her third novel (Jacob's Room) in order to posit questions about understanding subjectivity. Virginia Woolf's later novels are written in a prose style commonly called "stream-of-consciousness" or "mindstyle" that her first novel is not, and her third novel, although attempts this style of prose, is quite novice in its execution. Essentially, this project argues that it was through Woolf's use and complication of the Bildungsroman genre that she was able to pose philosophical questions about subjectivity and human understanding-- never answered in a concrete manner--that devel...
The purpose of this master’s thesis is to examine the narrative and thematic devices Virginia Woolf ...
This thesis investigates ways that Virginia Woolf's novel, Mrs. Dalloway, explores the effects of mo...
This thesis focuses on the window and the visual in Virginia Woolf's first three novels The Voyage O...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Ar...
Virginia Woolf's writing is aesthetically complex, politically engaged, and remains relevant today—a...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
The Bildungsroman constructed its fictional pattern in German literature in the eighteenth century, ...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
This thesis takes a look at how Virginia Woolf uses her writing-style to build up cha...
AbstractVirginia Woolf was one of the most distinctive writers of the English Literature using the s...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
The purpose of this master’s thesis is to examine the narrative and thematic devices Virginia Woolf ...
This thesis investigates ways that Virginia Woolf's novel, Mrs. Dalloway, explores the effects of mo...
This thesis focuses on the window and the visual in Virginia Woolf's first three novels The Voyage O...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Ar...
Virginia Woolf's writing is aesthetically complex, politically engaged, and remains relevant today—a...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
The writer proposes to: 1. clearly define and point out the characteristics of the stream-of-conscio...
The Bildungsroman constructed its fictional pattern in German literature in the eighteenth century, ...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
This thesis takes a look at how Virginia Woolf uses her writing-style to build up cha...
AbstractVirginia Woolf was one of the most distinctive writers of the English Literature using the s...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
The purpose of this master’s thesis is to examine the narrative and thematic devices Virginia Woolf ...
This thesis investigates ways that Virginia Woolf's novel, Mrs. Dalloway, explores the effects of mo...
This thesis focuses on the window and the visual in Virginia Woolf's first three novels The Voyage O...