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Virginia Woolf's Renaissance: Woman Reader or Common Reader? [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 281 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 499 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Apr-1997
  • Leidėjas: University of Iowa Press
  • ISBN-10: 0877455767
  • ISBN-13: 9780877455769
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 281 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 499 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Apr-1997
  • Leidėjas: University of Iowa Press
  • ISBN-10: 0877455767
  • ISBN-13: 9780877455769
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Explores Virginia Woolf's affinity with the early modern period and her sense of being reborn as writer and reader through the creation of an alternative tradition of reading and writing whose roots go back to the Elizabethans and beyond. The author, a Fellow in English at Girton College, Cambridge, critiques Woolf's ideas through a discussion of particular writers Montaigne, Donne, Pepys and Bunyan, Dorothy Osborne and Madame de STvignT. She considers the forms traditionally associated with women, such as the essay, the personal letter and diary, in the context of printing, the body, and the relationship between amateurs and professionals. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Acknowledgements ix(3)
Abbreviations xii
1 Virginia Woolf's Renaissance: Amateurs and Professionals
1(39)
Women and Literary Tradition
1(15)
The Personal and the Professional
16(2)
History or Fiction?
18(5)
Literature and Being: Quaker Inheritance
23(6)
Women and Printing
29(11)
2 Virginia Woolf and Montaigne: Them and Us
40(25)
A Female Genre
40(2)
The Art of Reading
42(10)
Rejecting Authority
52(5)
Montaigne and Gender
57(8)
3 Virginia Woolf Reads John Donne
65(29)
Undoing the `masculine' John Donne
65(12)
Translating Donne into the Feminine
77(8)
Rebels
85(9)
4 Letters as Resistance: Dorothy Osborne, Madame de Sevigne and Virginia Woolf
94(32)
Writing for Pleasure
94(10)
Preaching, Passion and Privacy
104(10)
Resisting the Family: Dorothy Osborne
114(5)
Letters, Great Men and Criticism
119(7)
5 Diaries: Pepys and Woolf
126(40)
A Passion for Records
126(12)
Pepys: Social Mobility and Marriage
138(11)
Virginia Woolf: New Woman
149(5)
Pepys and Woolf: Temporal and Spiritual Accounts
154(12)
6 Bunyan and Virginia Woolf: A History and a Language of Their Own
166(26)
Women and the Vernacular: Bunyan, Foxe and the Bible
166(11)
Outsiders
177(15)
7 The Body and the Book
192(41)
Body and Mind
192(6)
Bloomsbury: Female Space
198(8)
Obscenity: Sir John Harington and Woolf
206(11)
Bodies, Politics and the Unliterary
217(9)
The Press and the Fire
226(7)
Notes 233(24)
Select Bibliography 257(14)
Index 271