The pioneering editorial practices of Canadian Professor Edward Bishop and the late Professor David Bradshaw offer distinct but complementary approaches to annotating Woolf’s Jacob’s Room (1922). Bishop, editors of the Shakespeare Head edition of the novel and of a transcription of the holograph draft, has gifted new modernist editing the hugely influential, crucial instruction “Mind the gap!,” urging close attention to Woolf’s spacing and lay-out of the material page as important literary signifiers. “Mind the word!” might well be the riposte of Bradshaw (1955–2016) who has left a body of scholarship pressing for close critical attention to every passing cultural, material reference, not least in the numerous proper names of people, places...
In this thesis I examine relationships between recollections of loss and the narrating of memory in ...
My PhD explores the theme of the hotel in the modernist fiction of Jean Rhys, Katherine Mansfield an...
This thesis focuses on the window and the visual in Virginia Woolf's first three novels The Voyage O...
The pioneering editorial practices of Canadian Professor Edward Bishop and the late Professor David ...
“So, how should we edit the writings of Virginia Woolf?” ask Jane Goldman and Susan Sellers in their...
In this book chapter originally presented as a paper at the 18th Annual International Conference on ...
An Honors Thesis Submitted to the Department of English, Cornell University, April 2006. Winner of t...
Virginia Woolf’s ‘Ode written partly in prose on seeing the name of cutbush above a butcher’s shop i...
Covering the changes in Shakespeare editorial theory and practice over the decades between the publi...
This project explores the way in which Virginia Woolf uses and subverts the classic nineteenthcentur...
There has been substantial work done by critics over the years into the materiality of Virginia Wool...
Virginia Woolf’s essay A Room of One’s Own is celebrated as perhaps the most significant work of fem...
In the opening section of A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf sets her meditation on new feminine mo...
The Practice Ground for Fiction Dr Meg Jensen, Kingston University “It strikes me that in this boo...
This dissertation maps the relationship between Virginia Woolf’s fiction and essays, and William Sha...
In this thesis I examine relationships between recollections of loss and the narrating of memory in ...
My PhD explores the theme of the hotel in the modernist fiction of Jean Rhys, Katherine Mansfield an...
This thesis focuses on the window and the visual in Virginia Woolf's first three novels The Voyage O...
The pioneering editorial practices of Canadian Professor Edward Bishop and the late Professor David ...
“So, how should we edit the writings of Virginia Woolf?” ask Jane Goldman and Susan Sellers in their...
In this book chapter originally presented as a paper at the 18th Annual International Conference on ...
An Honors Thesis Submitted to the Department of English, Cornell University, April 2006. Winner of t...
Virginia Woolf’s ‘Ode written partly in prose on seeing the name of cutbush above a butcher’s shop i...
Covering the changes in Shakespeare editorial theory and practice over the decades between the publi...
This project explores the way in which Virginia Woolf uses and subverts the classic nineteenthcentur...
There has been substantial work done by critics over the years into the materiality of Virginia Wool...
Virginia Woolf’s essay A Room of One’s Own is celebrated as perhaps the most significant work of fem...
In the opening section of A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf sets her meditation on new feminine mo...
The Practice Ground for Fiction Dr Meg Jensen, Kingston University “It strikes me that in this boo...
This dissertation maps the relationship between Virginia Woolf’s fiction and essays, and William Sha...
In this thesis I examine relationships between recollections of loss and the narrating of memory in ...
My PhD explores the theme of the hotel in the modernist fiction of Jean Rhys, Katherine Mansfield an...
This thesis focuses on the window and the visual in Virginia Woolf's first three novels The Voyage O...