Virginia Woolf: the novels

By: Marsh, NicholasMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Analysing TextsPublication details: London Macmillan 1998Description: xi,224pISBN: 0333683498Subject(s): English literature | English fiction | Woolf, VirginiaDDC classification: 823.91 Summary: At the beginning of this century, Virginia Woolf reacted against literary tradition, sought a new definition of fiction, applied her modern, post-Freudian outlook and radically feminist ideas to the problem of writing novels and, in so doing, redefined our concept of this literary form. The results can be seen in Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and The Waves- three novels of a flowing, impressionistic texture that are, at the same time, highly structured. Making use of detailed analysis of selected extracts from the novels, the reader is taught to explore the delicate and yet rich writing Woolf achieved and to enquire into the significance of her ironies and symbolic structures. This volume does not sidestep the complexity of her works, bur challenges the reader to confront, examine and enjoy it.
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At the beginning of this century, Virginia Woolf reacted against literary tradition, sought a new definition of fiction, applied her modern, post-Freudian outlook and radically feminist ideas to the problem of writing novels and, in so doing, redefined our concept of this literary form. The results can be seen in Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and The Waves- three novels of a flowing, impressionistic texture that are, at the same time, highly structured. Making use of detailed analysis of selected extracts from the novels, the reader is taught to explore the delicate and yet rich writing Woolf achieved and to enquire into the significance of her ironies and symbolic structures. This volume does not sidestep the complexity of her works, bur challenges the reader to confront, examine and enjoy it.

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