Virginia WoolfWoolf was once the center of the Bloomsbury Group and a fierce Women's Rights activist; her lasting contributions to the world of literature, however, are often overshadowed by her tragic suicide. |
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Contents
1 | |
5 | |
67 | |
Virginia Woolf and the Problem of the Body | 95 |
Through Formalism | 109 |
Chronology | 135 |
Works by Virginia Woolf | 139 |
Works about Virginia Woolf | 141 |
Contributors | 145 |
INDEX | 147 |
Common terms and phrases
Adrian aesthetic ambivalence artists Asheham Auerbach’s beautiful became become began Bell’s Bennett biography Bloomsbury Group body brother Cambridge Carrington characters Clarissa Dalloway Clive Bell Common Reader critical Dalloway Dalloway’s daughter death diary Duncan Grant E.M. Forster Eliot essays Falstaff father feel feminist formalism formalism’s formalist friends Fry’s George Duckworth Gordon Square Hamlet Hogarth Press Hyde Park Gate Jacob’s Room John Lehmann Julia later Leaska Lehmann Leonard Woolf Leslie Stephen letters Lighthouse literary literature lives London Lytton Strachey marriage marry Mauron mind Miss Kilman Modern Fiction Monk’s House mother narrative Night and Day novel novelist Orlando painter published Rachel Ramsay Roger Fry Room of One’s seemed Septimus sexual Shakespeare Sickert sister social Stella story suicide T.S. Eliot things Thoby thought Three Guineas Vanessa Bell Victorian Violet Dickinson Virginia felt Virginia Woolf vision Vita Vita’s Voyage woman women writing York young