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Virginia Woolf Born 25th January 1882 to Leslie Stephen and Julia Duckworth 1895 death of her mother – first mental breakdown 1897 death of her sister Stella 1904 death of Leslie Stephen – second mental breakdown 1906 death of her brother Thoby 1905 Bloomsbury Group including Virginia Woolf, Leonard Woolf, John Maynard Keynes, Vanessa Bell, Clive Bell, Roger Fry, Lytton Strachey, E. M. Forster, Desmond MacCarthy 1912 marries Leonard Woolf - third mental breakdown 1917 Hogarth Press 28 March 1941 drowned herself in the river Ouse
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Novels 1915 The Voyage Out 1919 Night and Day 1922 Jacob’s Room 1925 Mrs Dalloway 1927 To the Lighthouse 1928 Orlando 1931 The Waves 1937 The Years 1941 Between the Acts
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To the Lighthouse A story of a marriage and a childhood A lamentation of loss and grief for loved, dead parents. An Elegy, as Woolf called it Less apparently it is about the English class- structure and its radical break with Victorianism after WW1. Demonstrates the need for an art form which could adapt to and register that break.
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Woolf on To the Lighthouse 24 May 1925 Diary: “This is going to be fairly short: to have father’s character done complete in it; & mothers; & St Ives; & childhood; & all the usual things I try to put in – life, death, etc. But the centre is father’s character, sitting in a boat, reciting We perished, each alone, while he crushes a dying mackerel”. “I mean nothing by the Lighthouse.[ …] I saw that all sorts of feelings would accrue to this, but I refused to think them out, and trusted that people would make it the deposit for their own emotions – which they have done, one thinking it means one thing another another. I can’t manage Symbolism except in this vague, generalized way”.
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Moments of being1 Moments of being are moments in which we experience an intense sense of a reality that is normally hidden beneath the cotton wool of our ordinary, everyday experience. These are moments of special significance which have the power to survive in memory and which are normally covered over by the bustle and rush of active daily living.
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Moments of being2 The moments of being, sometimes charged with revelations of astonishing intensity, are threaded in among scenes, of typical days and occasions, describing the physical environment, the social forces, the family and personal attachments and passions, which shape the outer self. The moments of intensity may come […] from something […] apparently trivial. Such a moment for Virginia Woolf is one of the recognition and the revelation – the value of which is independent of the object that is catalyst – and, as such, is very close to Joyce’s notion of epiphany.
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V. Woolf, A Writer’s Diary, 15 Oct 1923 The doubtful point is, I think, the character of Mrs. Dalloway. It may be too stiff, too glittering and tinselly. But then I can bring innumerable other characters to her support. I wrote the 100th page today. Of course, I've only been feeling my way into it--up till last August anyhow. It took me a year's groping to discover what I call my tunnelling process, by which I tell the past by installments, as I have need of it. This is my prime discovery so far; and the fact that I've been so long finding it proves, I think, how false Percy Lubbock's doctrine is-- that you can do this sort of thing consciously. One feels about in a state of misery-- indeed I made up my mind one night to abandon the book- -& then one touches the hidden spring.
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Woolf and Characterization: Tunnelling 30 August 1923--I have no time to describe my plans. I should say a good deal about The Hours [which became Mrs. Dalloway], and my discovery: how I dig out beautiful caves behind my characters: I think that gives exactly what I want; humanity, humor, depth. The idea is that the caves shall connect and each come to daylight at the present moment.
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Woolf and Characterization: Tunnelling Sometimes the time stream that the narration has been following is interrupted in order to follow some connection back to an earlier episode. It is as if the stream goes underground to follow a hidden network of connections and meanings not because it is a realistic rendering of the movements of the character’s consciousness but in order for the reader to be informed of the hidden, past experiences of the character that are needed in order to understand more deeply the significance of some present experience or thought. It is as if behind the present moment of consciousness there lies a vast system of caves and the narrator follows a route through some of these so that the reader is gradually more and more able to appreciate what stands beyond the surface and the open mouths of the caves where they come to the surface at any present moment.
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