This thesis examines the intersection between Virginia Woolf’s contemporary materialist critique of imperial-patriarchal society and the more timeless existential inquiries that permeate her work. Analyzing two novels, The Voyage Out (1920) and Orlando: A Biography (1928), the project looks at the ways in which Woolf’s experimentations with genre develop her materialist critique while her modernist sublime aesthetic connects the political to existential questions. The thesis also argues for a thematic potentiality of Being that shapes Woolf’s unified political-artistic vision. It identifies two different types of yearning that characterize the stories of Woolf’s female protagonists: “identity-based yearning” and “universal existential ye...
My thesis recognizes Virginia Woolf's writing to be composed of a mosaic of multiple art forms such ...
This study is a critical reexamination of descriptions of visionary experiences in the novels of Woo...
This project is an interdisciplinary study of Virginia Woolf’s artistic representation of perception...
This thesis offers a philosophical and affective history of the subject-object encounter in Virginia...
My thesis is about Virginia Woolf’s novels, Mrs. Dalloway, The Waves, and To the Lighthouse. I exami...
This project explores how the modern novel restructures traditional conceptions of the Romantic subl...
Literary critics and art theorists celebrate the work of Virginia Woolf and the activities of London...
In recent years, scholars have sought to reposition domesticity against literary modernism, separati...
Woolf believed that there are “two spheres: the novel; and life,” and her “great difficulty is the u...
PhD ThesisThis thesis examines four novels by Virginia Woolf – Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, The ...
Beginning with the premise that Virginia Woolf's novels exhibit a dual perspective of psychological ...
This thesis investigates the interrelationship between the two dominant themes, isolation and human ...
The thesis intends to explore the aesthetic importance of The Waves. It argues that the feature of a...
Virginia Woolf’s work is shaped by her knowledge of, and fascination with, visual cultures. Orlando,...
This study is a critical reexamination of descriptions of visionary experiences in the novels of Woo...
My thesis recognizes Virginia Woolf's writing to be composed of a mosaic of multiple art forms such ...
This study is a critical reexamination of descriptions of visionary experiences in the novels of Woo...
This project is an interdisciplinary study of Virginia Woolf’s artistic representation of perception...
This thesis offers a philosophical and affective history of the subject-object encounter in Virginia...
My thesis is about Virginia Woolf’s novels, Mrs. Dalloway, The Waves, and To the Lighthouse. I exami...
This project explores how the modern novel restructures traditional conceptions of the Romantic subl...
Literary critics and art theorists celebrate the work of Virginia Woolf and the activities of London...
In recent years, scholars have sought to reposition domesticity against literary modernism, separati...
Woolf believed that there are “two spheres: the novel; and life,” and her “great difficulty is the u...
PhD ThesisThis thesis examines four novels by Virginia Woolf – Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, The ...
Beginning with the premise that Virginia Woolf's novels exhibit a dual perspective of psychological ...
This thesis investigates the interrelationship between the two dominant themes, isolation and human ...
The thesis intends to explore the aesthetic importance of The Waves. It argues that the feature of a...
Virginia Woolf’s work is shaped by her knowledge of, and fascination with, visual cultures. Orlando,...
This study is a critical reexamination of descriptions of visionary experiences in the novels of Woo...
My thesis recognizes Virginia Woolf's writing to be composed of a mosaic of multiple art forms such ...
This study is a critical reexamination of descriptions of visionary experiences in the novels of Woo...
This project is an interdisciplinary study of Virginia Woolf’s artistic representation of perception...