A Room of One's Own | The Various Settings in A Room of One's Own
Dell’Amico has published numerous essays and articles on twentieth century authors and teaches literature and composition. In the following essay, the author considers various settings of the novel, Oxbridge, Fernham, the British Museum, and the streets of London.
The commentary that makes up Virginia Woolf s A Room of One's Own is delivered by a female narrator on the move. She is first depicted wandering out-of-doors on the grounds of a university campus. Immediately afterwards, she makes her way indoors into various rooms and halls belonging to two of the many colleges that readers can assume make up this university. Next, she is depicted visiting the British Museum in the heart of London. She ends the book located in her London home. The mobility of this narrator points to the importance of setting in the novel. Setting, the context...
[The entire page is 1911 words long]
Join eNotes
The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:
Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...
