Introduction


Virginia Woolf
Who was afraid of Virginia Woolf? In the end, maybe only Virginia herself. The troubled writer is as famous for her mental illness as for her writing. Though some critics have dismissed Woolf’s oeuvre as narrow and elitist (an accusation leveled at Modernist authors in general), many others have heralded her books for expanding the ideas of time and place in traditional narrative. Perhaps even more importantly, Woolf has been recognized for her philosophical musings on literature, sex, and gender. Her seminal nonfiction work, A Room of One’s Own, notes the difficulties faced by women writers and places them in historical context. Although the feminist movements of the 1960s and 1970s helped return Woolf to prominence, her own unique talents have sustained her respected position in 20th-century literature.

Essential Facts

  1. Woolf’s family was full of historical and cultural connections. Her father’s first wife was the daughter of William Makepeace Thackeray, and her mother was a descendant of one of Marie Antoinette’s ladies in waiting.
  2. Woolf was a member of the famous Bloomsbury Group. Its constituents included such literary luminaries as E. M. Forester and Lytton Strachey. The writer and critic Leonard Woolf, who eventually became her husband, was a member too.
  3. Woolf was a devoted diarist. The collected edition of her diary spans five volumes.
  4. Woolf’s mental illness has inspired many posthumous diagnoses, most commonly bipolar disorder or manic depression. Her struggles ended with her suicide in 1941.
  5. Woolf’s life was fictionalized in Michael Cunningham’s 1998 novel The Hours, which was adapted into a film in 2002. Nicole Kidman won an Oscar for her role as Woolf.
 

All Resources

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  1. A Room of One's Own Summary & Essays - Virginia Woolf
  2. Aphra Behn Criticism | Virginia Woolf (essay Date 1929)
  3. E(dward) M(organ) Forster Criticism | Virginia Woolf
  4. Kew Gardens Summary & Essays - Virginia Woolf
  5. Leonard and Virginia Woolf as Publishers Review - J. H. Willis
  6. Margaret Cavendish Criticism | Virginia Woolf (essay Date 1925)
  7. Modernism Study Guide (eNotes)
  8. Mrs. Dalloway Summary & Essays - Virginia Woolf
  9. Orlando Summary / Study Guide
  10. Philip Tew Special Commissioned Essay on Virginia Woolf Criticism
  11. Richard Hakluyt Criticism | Virginia Woolf (essay Date 1925)
  12. The Cherry Orchard Criticism | Virginia Woolf (essay Date 1920)
  13. The Diary of Virginia Woolf Summary - Adeline Virginia Stephen
  14. The Diary of Virginia Woolf Summary - Adeline Virginia Stephen
  15. The Duchess and the Jeweller Summary / Study Guide
  16. The Essays of Virginia Woolf Review - Adeline Virginia Stephen
  17. The Letters of Virginia Woolf Summary - Adeline Virginia Stephen
  18. The Literary Essays of Virginia Woolf Summary - Adeline Virginia Stephen
  19. The Mark on the Wall Summary / Study Guide
  20. The New Dress Summary & Essays - Virginia Woolf
  21. To the Lighthouse Summary & Essays - Virginia Woolf
  22. Virginia Woolf Biography
  23. Virginia Woolf Biography / Profile
  24. Virginia Woolf Biography / Profile
  25. Virginia Woolf Biography / Profile
  26. Virginia Woolf Biography / Profile
  27. Virginia Woolf Criticism
  28. Virginia Woolf Review - Hermione Lee
  29. Virginia Woolf Review - Hermione Lee
  30. Virginia Woolf Review - James King
  31. Virginia Woolf Review - James King
  32. Virginia Woolf Review - Louise DeSalvo
  33. Virginia Woolf Review - Lyndall Gordon
  34. Virginia Woolf Review - Lyndall Gordon
  35. Virginia Woolf To the Lighthouse Criticism
  36. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf: The Oxford Dictionary of Plays
  37. Woolf, (Adeline) Virginia: The Oxford Companion to English Literature
  38. Woolf, (Adeline) Virginia: The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare
  39. Woolf, Virginia | Introduction: Feminism in Literature