“A Room of One’s Own” by Virginia Woolf
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| "A Room of One's Own" by Anais Woolf http://www.artpistol.co.uk/art-gallery/room-ones-own |
How is the everyday an important concern in
Woolf’s work? How does she provide
access to the everyday in ways that differ or relate to works that we’ve read?
Virginia Woolf brilliantly explores the everyday life of women in the 1920s through a detailed and tedious
account of her thought processes of the everyday that combines fictional
storytelling with aspects of truth. By
approaching the topic of “women and fiction” in this manner, and I can only
assume that the everyday life of women was not a subject that was highly
accessible through the discourse of this time, Woolf manages to produce a
persuasive means of communicating the truth behind the everyday sexist
encounters and the oppression of women through a fictional character. She makes it clear that the identity of the
narrator is irrelevant, “call me Mary Beton, Mary Seton, Mary Carmichael or by any name you
please--it is not a matter of any importance”, because her story is true and
applicable to all women of her lifetime (Woolf 3).
Woolf’s poetic technique differs
from other works we have read thus far because she does not give us philosophical
writing, a literary analysis or a research study, but rather a stream of
consciousness. Fictional or not, the inequality
within the thoughts she has and personal encounters she describes rings true
for womankind in a way that many writers have not been
able to access through alternative styles of writing. Woolf writes with a certain directness and
honesty, while recognizing the limitations of her individual perspective
outright, that makes it incredibly difficult, nearly impossible, to refute or
disagree with her argument in any way.
She states very explicitly that her ideas are conveyed strictly through
opinion and personal sentiment and in no way is her writing developed from any
sort of factual perspective, because “one can only show how one came to hold
whatever opinion one does have” (Woolf 2).
An important connection is made regarding the relationship that women
have with two distinct concepts: instinct and reason. Although logic and reason would tell her that
she should have the same rights as men and be allowed to walk on the turf,
oppressive instincts overwhelm her thinking and send her walking on the gravel,
where women belong. How did it come to
be that women instinctually feel inferior to men? Is this still true today?

Regarding the references to Marys: http://www.maryqueenofscots.net/happened-four-marys-beaton-seton-fleming-livingston-death-lady-mary-queen-scots/
ReplyDeleteAnd perhaps more directly relevant: http://www.marie-stuart.co.uk/Music/Lyrics/FourMarys.htm
ReplyDelete