Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-garde

Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-garde

War, Civilization, Modernity

  • Auteur: Froula, Christine
  • Éditeur: Columbia University Press
  • Collection: Gender and Culture Series
  • ISBN: 9780231134446
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780231508780
  • Lieu de publication:  New York , United States
  • Année de publication électronique: 2006
  • Mois : Septembre
  • Langue: Anglais

Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde traces the dynamic emergence of Woolf's art and thought against Bloomsbury's public thinking about Europe's future in a period marked by two world wars and rising threats of totalitarianism. Educated informally in her father's library and in Bloomsbury's London extension of Cambridge, Virginia Woolf came of age in the prewar decades, when progressive political and social movements gave hope that Europe "might really be on the brink of becoming civilized," as Leonard Woolf put it. For pacifist Bloomsbury, heir to Europe's unfinished Enlightenment project of human rights, democratic self-governance, and world peace—and, in E. M. Forster's words, "the only genuine movement in English civilization"— the 1914 "civil war" exposed barbarities within Europe: belligerent nationalisms, rapacious racialized economic imperialism, oppressive class and sex/gender systems, a tragic and unnecessary war that mobilized sixty-five million and left thirty-seven million casualties. An avant-garde in the twentieth-century struggle against the violence within European civilization, Bloomsbury and Woolf contributed richly to interwar debates on Europe's future at a moment when democracy's triumph over fascism and communism was by no means assured.

Woolf honed her public voice in dialogue with contemporaries in and beyond Bloomsbury— John Maynard Keynes and Roger Fry to Sigmund Freud (published by the Woolfs'Hogarth Press), Bertrand Russell, T. S. Eliot, E. M. Forster, Katherine Mansfield, and many others—and her works embody and illuminate the convergence of aesthetics and politics in post-Enlightenment thought. An ambitious history of her writings in relation to important currents in British intellectual life in the first half of the twentieth century, this book explores Virginia Woolf's narrative journey from her first novel, The Voyage Out, through her last, Between the Acts.

  • Table of Contents
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Preface
  • 1. Civilization and "my civilisation": Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde
  • 2. Rachel's Great War: Civilization, Sacrifice, and the Enlightenment of Women in Melymbrosia and The Voyage Out
  • 3. The Death of Jacob Flanders: Greek Illusion and Modern War in Jacob's Room
  • 4. Mrs. Dalloway's Postwar Elegy: Women, War, and the Art of Mourning
  • 5. Picture the World: The Quest for the Thing Itself in To the Lighthouse
  • 6. A Fin in a Waste of Waters: Women, Genius, Freedom in Orlando, A Room of One's Own, and The Waves
  • 7. The Sexual Life of Women: Experimental Genres, Experimental Publics from The Pargiters to The Years
  • 8. St. Virginia's Epistle to an English Gentleman: Sex, Violence, and the Public Sphere in Three Guineas
  • 9. The Play in the Sky of the Mind: Between the Acts of Civilization's Masterplot
  • Notes
  • Index

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