The essay “Who is Percival?” discusses the complex questions which arise from the obvious contradictions between the ideals of the hero Percival in Virginia Woolf’s novel The Waves and the political opinions which Woolf herself expressed in some of her other texts. The author acts as an invisible narrator; the reader cannot be sure of her point of view. The insecurity forces the reader to take an active part in the interpretation of the voices of the six friends, whose soliloquies, in which they describe their different views on life and their common friend Percival, form the text. The reader becomes an active part in the dialogue between ideas, texts, ideals and thoughts. Applying M. M. Bakhtin’s terms monologism, heteroglossia and dialogi...
It can be argued that in her numerous essays Woolf provides a theory of fiction, although she redefi...
The thesis intends to explore the aesthetic importance of The Waves. It argues that the feature of a...
Literary critics and art theorists celebrate the work of Virginia Woolf and the activities of London...
In my thesis I shall elaborate on how the self is constructed in Modernism. Based on Virginia Woolf’...
The article focuses on Virginia Woolf’s novel, The Waves, a sui generis work, in which the writer ex...
Thesis (PhD (English Literature))--University of Pretoria, 2022.This thesis explores representations...
This paper aims at investigating Virginia Woolf’s stance on impersonality in literature in relation ...
Louis in The Waves is modeled on T. S. Eliot. That is clear when we see his neat, precise manner and...
This essay analyzes the ways in which T.S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf simultaneously construct and dec...
The analysis of To the lighthouse, written by Virginia Woolf, and of part of her critical essays giv...
Thesis (S.B. in Literature)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 2006.Includ...
Virginia Woolf’s The Waves describes the lives of six characters (three male, three female) from ear...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
Mikhail Bakhtin's dialogism in a novel promises the creation of a domain of interactive context for ...
This paper examines narrative, biography, and selfhood in Virginia Woolf\u27s The Waves (1931). The ...
It can be argued that in her numerous essays Woolf provides a theory of fiction, although she redefi...
The thesis intends to explore the aesthetic importance of The Waves. It argues that the feature of a...
Literary critics and art theorists celebrate the work of Virginia Woolf and the activities of London...
In my thesis I shall elaborate on how the self is constructed in Modernism. Based on Virginia Woolf’...
The article focuses on Virginia Woolf’s novel, The Waves, a sui generis work, in which the writer ex...
Thesis (PhD (English Literature))--University of Pretoria, 2022.This thesis explores representations...
This paper aims at investigating Virginia Woolf’s stance on impersonality in literature in relation ...
Louis in The Waves is modeled on T. S. Eliot. That is clear when we see his neat, precise manner and...
This essay analyzes the ways in which T.S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf simultaneously construct and dec...
The analysis of To the lighthouse, written by Virginia Woolf, and of part of her critical essays giv...
Thesis (S.B. in Literature)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 2006.Includ...
Virginia Woolf’s The Waves describes the lives of six characters (three male, three female) from ear...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
Mikhail Bakhtin's dialogism in a novel promises the creation of a domain of interactive context for ...
This paper examines narrative, biography, and selfhood in Virginia Woolf\u27s The Waves (1931). The ...
It can be argued that in her numerous essays Woolf provides a theory of fiction, although she redefi...
The thesis intends to explore the aesthetic importance of The Waves. It argues that the feature of a...
Literary critics and art theorists celebrate the work of Virginia Woolf and the activities of London...