A Room of One's Own. Virginia Woolf

A Room of One's Own - Virginia Woolf


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Eliot, the Brontës, and Aphra Behn. She establishes a new model of literary heritage, which acknowledges not only those women who succeeded, but those who were made invisible or anonymous, prevented from working in the first place due to their sex, or their works cast aside by prevailing value systems. Woolf explores how women's letter‐writing, for example, can demonstrate both a woman's aptitude for writing and the way in which it is cramped and suppressed by other expectations of her time.

      For Woolf, the establishment of major women writers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the moment ‘the middle‐class woman began to write’, is in her mind a moment in history ‘of greater importance than the Crusades or the War of the Roses.’ T.S. Eliot in ‘Tradition and the Individual Talent’ (1919) and Harold Bloom in The Anxiety of Influence (1973) both identify the (male) writer's relation to his precursors as necessary for his own literary production. But how is a woman to write if she has no models, Woolf asks? This is, she says, the ‘difficulty which faced [women writers] … when they came to set their thoughts to paper – that is that they had no tradition behind them, or one so short and partial that it was of little help’. Famously, she asserts, ‘we think back through our mothers if we are women.’ Woolf continues:

      This argument for a matrilineal heritage became central to the feminist revisionist work of literary critics like Toril Moi, Elaine Showalter, Carolyn Heilbrun, Jane Marcus, Gillian Beer, Sandra K. Gilbert and Susan Gubar. Woolf was positioned as ‘the “mother” of feminist critics of the late twentieth century … the alpha and omega of feminist criticism, its origin and its “goal,”’ as Laura Marcus (2010) puts it. Just as the women writers Woolf identifies could not have come into being without their literary foremothers, so too it is hard to imagine contemporary feminism without Woolf.

      One of the most important moments in A Room of One's Own is in Woolf's evocation of another imagined character, a writer named Mary Carmichael. As Woolf's contemporary, Carmichael emerges from the strictures that prevented Judith Shakespeare from succeeding as a writer. Her writing suffers from a self‐imposed restriction, what Woolf identifies as a fear ‘of being called “sentimental,”’ but her work is unusual in that it is seeking to inculcate change in both form and content.

      The Mary Carmichael episode of A Room of One's Own is also critical for our understanding of Woolf's perception of the socio‐economic status of women writing in her time, especially for the possible futures she describes throughout the essay. Mary Carmichael comes to stand as the ‘link between the middle‐class women writers of the eighteenth century and Woolf's predicted future woman writer of genius,’ argues Melissa Sullivan (2013). Through the figure of Mary Carmichael, Woolf observes the failures of modern women writers to achieve full intellectual and creative freedom, even as she celebrates the strides this figure has made since the death of her ancestor, Judith Shakespeare.

      The late 1920s and early 1930s were particularly prolific and significant years in Woolf's writing career. The period saw the publication of the novels Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), Orlando (1928), and The Waves (1931), in addition to the experimental biography Flush (1933), and three major essay collections: The London Scene (1931) and The Common Reader (1925 and 1932). It was also during this period that Woolf drafted another notable lecture‐cum‐essay, ‘Professions for Women’ (1931), delivered to The Women's Service League.

      But ‘Professions for Women’ is most important for its recognition of an obstacle not recognised in A Room of One's Own: ‘if I were going to review books I should need to do battle with a certain phantom. And the phantom was a woman … It was she who used to come between me and my paper when I was writing reviews. It was she who bothered me and wasted my time and so tormented me that at last I killed her.’

      Named after Coventry Patmore's 1854 poem of the same title, Woolf's so‐called ‘Angel in the House’ conveys the way the idealised image of woman becomes a spectre that stops women from writing. This ‘angel in the house’ is both a symbol of cultural discourses about women's roles and a persistent internal monologue that discourages women from writing.


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