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What if William Shakespeare had a sister
who matched his imagination,
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his wit and his way with words?
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Would she have gone to school
and set the stage alight?
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In her essay A Room of One's Own,
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Virginia Woolf argues that this would
have been impossible.
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She concocts a fictional sister
who's stuck at home,
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snatching time to scribble a few pages
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before she finds herself
betrothed and runs away.
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While her brother finds fame and fortune,
she remains abandoned and anonymous.
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In this thought experiment,
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Woolf demonstrates the tragedy
of genius restricted,
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and looks back through time for hints
of these hidden histories.
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She wrote, "When one reads
of a witch being ducked,
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of a woman possessed by devils,
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of a wise woman selling herbs,
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or even a very remarkable man
who had a mother,
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then I think we're on the track
of a lost novelist,
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a suppressed poet,
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of some mute and inglorious Jane Austin."
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A Room of One's Own considers a world
denied great works of art
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due to exclusion and inequality.
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How best can we understand
the internal experience of alienation?
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In both her essays and fiction,
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Virginia Woolf shapes the slippery nature
of subjective experience into words.
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Her characters frequently lead inner lives
that are deeply at odds
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with their external existence.
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To help make sense of these disparities,
the next time you read Woolf,
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here are some aspects of her life
and work to consider.
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She was born Adeline Virginia Stephen
in 1882 to a large and wealthy family,
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which enabled her to pursue a life
in the arts.
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The death of her mother in 1895
was followed by that of her half-sister,
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father, and brother
within the next ten years.
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These losses led to Woolf's first
depressive episode
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and subsequent institutionalization.
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As a young woman, she purchased a house
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in the Bloomsbury area
of London with her siblings.
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This brought her into contact
with a circle of creatives,
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including E.M. Forester,
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Clive Bell,
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Roger Fry,
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and Leonard Woolf.
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These friends became known
as the Bloomsbury Group,
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and Virginia and Leonard married in 1912.
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The members of this group were prominent
figures in Modernism,
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a cultural movement that sought
to push the boundaries
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of how reality is represented.
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Key features of Modernist writing include
the use of stream of consciousness,
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interior monologue,
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distortions in time,
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and multiple or shifting perspectives.
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These appear in the work of Ezra Pound,
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Gertrude Stein,
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James Joyce,
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and Woolf herself.
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While reading Joyce's Ulysses,
Woolf began writing Mrs. Dalloway.
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Like Ulysses, the text takes place
over the course of a single day
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and opens under seemingly
mundane circumstances.
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"Mrs. Dalloway said she would
buy the flowers herself."
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But the novel dives deeply
into the characters' traumatic pasts,
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weaving the inner world of numb
socialite Clarissa Dalloway,
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with that of the shell-shocked veteran
Septimus Warren Smith.
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Woolf uses interior monologue
to contrast the rich world of the mind
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against her characters'
external existences.
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In her novel To the Lighthouse,
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mundane moments, like a dinner party,
or losing a necklace
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trigger psychological revelations
in the lives of the Ramsays,
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a fictionalized version
of Woolf's family growing up.
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To the Lighthouse also contains
one of the most famous examples
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of Woolf's radical representation of time.
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In the Time Passes section,
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ten years are distilled
into about 20 pages.
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Here, the lack of human presence
in the Ramsays' beach house
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allows Woolf to reimagine time
in flashes and fragments of prose.
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"The house was left.
The house was deserted.
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It was left like a shell on a sand hill
to fill with dry salt grains
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now that life had left it."
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In her novel The Waves,
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there is little distinction between
the narratives of the six main characters.
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Woolf experiments
with collective consciousness,
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at times collapsing the six voices
into one.
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"It is not one life that I look back upon:
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I am not one person:
i am many people:
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I do not altogether know who I am,
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Jinny, Susan, Neville, Rhoda or Louis,
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or how to distinguish
my life from their's."
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In The Waves, six become one,
but in the gender-bending Orlando,
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a single character
inhabits multiple identities.
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The protagonist is a poet who switches
between genders and lives for 300 years.
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With its fluid language
and approach to identity,
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Orlando is considered
a key text in gender studies.
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"The mind can only fly
so far from the body
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before it returns
to the constraints of life."
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Like many of her characters,
Woolf's life ended in tragedy
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when she drowned herself at the age of 59.
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Yet, she expressed hope beyond suffering.
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Through deep thought,
Woolf's characters are shown
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to temporarily transcend
their material reality,
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and in its careful consideration
of the complexity of the mind,
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her work charts the importance of making
our inner lives known to each other.