This article examines the supposed lack of “humanity” in Woolf’s short stories and novels by identifying its source in the sphere of “solid objects” and in the way these “objects” destabilize the coherence of what the western philosophical tradition typically refers to as “subject” (in the Cartesian sense). Referring to Moore’s direct realism as well as James’s and Mach’s radical empiricism, the discussion focuses on specific states of heightened perceptive intensity in which the perceiving subject stumbles on the verge of collapse and “mixes” itself with what it perceives. By considering these limit cases, this paper tries to demonstrate the way in which Woolf’s fiction might in fact be understood as illustrative of the process of de-human...
Beginning with the premise that Virginia Woolf's novels exhibit a dual perspective of psychological ...
This study investigates the use of objects in the fiction of Virginia Woolf. The study centres on Vi...
This article calls into question the critical use of the label ‘epiphany’ as it has been applied to ...
This thesis offers a philosophical and affective history of the subject-object encounter in Virginia...
Virginia Woolf’s aspirations in fiction display a modernist attitude towards art and life that resul...
It can be argued that in her numerous essays Woolf provides a theory of fiction, although she redefi...
Some of Virginia Woolf's writing is analytical of the literary world, including its history and proc...
This thesis examines the ways in which the writings of Henry Parland, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf...
Many forms of materialism, new and old, have lately offered highly visible avenues of critical and h...
Theories of materiality have long attempted to explain the importance of the nonhuman and to disrupt...
Theories of materiality have long attempted to explain the importance of the nonhuman and to disrupt...
How are we affected by “other than human forces”? Drawing on ecocriticism, posthumanism, and New Mat...
Austen and Woolf are materialists, this book argues. ‘Things’ in their novels give us entry into som...
AbstractVirginia Woolf and the Mediated Modern Subject: Class System, Spacetime, and the Aesthetics ...
Drawing on Jean-Luc Nancy’s insights into bodies as the place of existence, David Abram’s thinking o...
Beginning with the premise that Virginia Woolf's novels exhibit a dual perspective of psychological ...
This study investigates the use of objects in the fiction of Virginia Woolf. The study centres on Vi...
This article calls into question the critical use of the label ‘epiphany’ as it has been applied to ...
This thesis offers a philosophical and affective history of the subject-object encounter in Virginia...
Virginia Woolf’s aspirations in fiction display a modernist attitude towards art and life that resul...
It can be argued that in her numerous essays Woolf provides a theory of fiction, although she redefi...
Some of Virginia Woolf's writing is analytical of the literary world, including its history and proc...
This thesis examines the ways in which the writings of Henry Parland, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf...
Many forms of materialism, new and old, have lately offered highly visible avenues of critical and h...
Theories of materiality have long attempted to explain the importance of the nonhuman and to disrupt...
Theories of materiality have long attempted to explain the importance of the nonhuman and to disrupt...
How are we affected by “other than human forces”? Drawing on ecocriticism, posthumanism, and New Mat...
Austen and Woolf are materialists, this book argues. ‘Things’ in their novels give us entry into som...
AbstractVirginia Woolf and the Mediated Modern Subject: Class System, Spacetime, and the Aesthetics ...
Drawing on Jean-Luc Nancy’s insights into bodies as the place of existence, David Abram’s thinking o...
Beginning with the premise that Virginia Woolf's novels exhibit a dual perspective of psychological ...
This study investigates the use of objects in the fiction of Virginia Woolf. The study centres on Vi...
This article calls into question the critical use of the label ‘epiphany’ as it has been applied to ...