1 “That Odd Whir of Wings in the Head”: Illness, Treatment, And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1 “That Odd Whir of Wings in the Head”: Illness, Treatment, And “That odd whir of wings in the head”: Illness, Treatment, and Virginia Woolf’s Modernism by Anna Eve Harvey Thesis Advisor: Paul Armstrong Second Reader: John Readey Thesis Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts In the English Honors Program in the Department of English At Brown University April 9, 2020 1 I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. I authorize Brown University to lend this thesis to other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. I further authorize Brown University to reproduce this thesis by photocopying or by other means, in total or in part, at the request of other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. __________________________ Signature 2 Brown University requires the signatures of all persons using or photocopying this thesis. Please sign below, and give address and date. 3 Acknowledgements I would like to thank my advisor, Paul Armstrong, for believing in this project from the beginning and for graciously describing my writing as “Woolfian” when it just had too many commas. Thank you to my second reader, Jon Readey, for long conversations over four years and for teaching me (finally!) how to cite correctly. This thesis is, at it its core, about finding a home in one’s body and in one’s mind. It is about breaking down and putting oneself back together again, one word at a time. It is, in the end, about finding joy in places you never thought it could be. To the women of 206 Power— Abby Haber, Amanda Madigan, and Virginia Schilder—who showed me just how much happiness a small space can hold when the right people are in it. In coming home to you, I learned how to come home to myself. I am a better woman every day because of you three. Finally, this work is for my family. To my grandpa, Monte, for sparking my interest in medicine. And to my parents, Linda and Mark, for making sure I always had a steady supply of books. I love you. 4 Table of Contents Introduction……………………………………………………………………………….5 Chapter 1: Writing the Rest Cure in Mrs. Dalloway……………………….……………17 Chapter 2: Essaying the Sickroom in “On Being Ill” …………………….……………..33 Chapter 3: Transforming Illness and Inventing the New Novel in The Waves………….50 Epilogue………………………………………………………………………………….68 Note on Abbreviations Diaries and letters are abbreviated by volume and page number. For example, a citation for page 100 of Diary, Volume 1 would be written as (D1: 100). In in-text citations, all of Woolf’s works are abbreviated according to the first letters of the title. For example, Mrs. Dalloway is abbreviated as MD, “On Being Ill” as OBI, and The Waves as W. 5 Surgeons must be very careful When they take the knife! Underneath their fine incisions Stirs the Culprit—Life! - Emily Dickinson I took a deep breath and listened to the old bray of my heart. I am, I am, I am. - Sylvia Plath 6 Introduction I’ve had some very curious visions in this room too, lying in bed, mad, & seeing the sunlight quiver like gold water, on the wall. I’ve heard the voices of the dead here. And felt, through it all, exquisitely happy. (D2: 283) On the ninth of January, 1924, London was frigid and grey, but Virginia Woolf, having just signed a lease to move back to the heart of Bloomsbury (to 52 Tavistock Square, to be exact) could not feel more alive. “London thou art a jewel of jewels & jasper of jocunditie—music, talk, friendship, city views, books, publishing, something central & inexplicable, all this is now within my reach, as it hasn’t been since August 1913,” she wrote in her diary (D2: 283). The past decade had been “a series of catastrophies which very nearly ended my life,” prompting a move away from the city, alternating between Asheham in Sussex and Hogarth House in the London suburb of Richmond at the behest of her doctors, who believed the city’s frenetic pace would wreak havoc on her frayed nerves (D2: 283). Between the ages of 13 and 33, Virginia Woolf experienced five major breakdowns, two of which resulted in suicide attempts. Yet, during this period, she wrote and published three novels, dozens of critical essays, and a selection of short stories, in addition to keeping a regular diary and maintaining meticulous correspondence with friends all over the world. She married Leonard Woolf in 1913, and in 1917, after the £19 purchase of a hand-press (which they set up at their dining room table), they jointly founded the Hogarth Press, which published work by Katherine Mansfield, T.S. Eliot, Clive Bell, Roger Fry, and other eminent modernists throughout its tenure. “I ought to be grateful to Richmond and Hogarth…” Woolf wrote on that January day in 1924. “Nowhere better could have suited better all those years…Moreover, nowhere else could we have started the Hogarth Press…” (D2: 283). 7 In a postscript to this diary entry—the passage that begins this introduction—she elaborates further, musing on her “curious visions,” the “quiver” of morning light, and the “voices of the dead” she heard during her convalescence, all of which made her feel, “through it all, exquisitely happy.” Life and death collide in this observation, crashing into each other like waves on the shore as she lies prone, “mad,” in bed. The breath of ghosts feels no different than the whisper of sunlight on the pillow; both enter the sickroom like old friends and exit positively buzzing with imaginative potential. Virginia Woolf’s life, like her writing, does not take kindly to neat categorization. She was skeptical of the easy illness narrative—diagnosis, treatment, cure—recognizing that her constitution was prone to variation and her condition chronic. Leonard, who kept a detailed diary of Virginia’s health throughout their marriage (coded in Tamil and Sinhalese, lest anyone read such intimate accounts), wrote in his autobiography, Downhill All the Way: It was a perpetual struggle to find the precarious balance of health for her among the strains and stresses of writing and society…The threat was almost always a headache, which was the warning signal of mental strain; the ‘illness,’ if it came to that, was the first stage towards breakdown. We knew exactly what the treatment should be; the moment the headache came, she had to go to bed and remain there comatose, eating and sleeping, until the symptoms began to abate. (49) As her biographer Hermione Lee notes, Woolf frequently uses the word “apprehensive” to describe her state of mind around a breakdown, implying an awareness of the “awful fear” at the constant possibility of the recurrence of madness (Lee 175). Woolf was no soldier, her body no battlefield—she did not set out to conquer her illness as one conquers an enemy. Rather, she was concerned with moving “through it all,” with living daily under the shadow of apprehension and living anyway. 8 As a woman who was often ill, and therefore prescribed long periods of rest, Woolf was frequently at the mercy of her own body (in which I include her brain) and the recommendations of her caregivers. And yet, she did not put her life on hold—in fact, she used these experiences to illuminate and inform her very mode of being. Her diaries are full of entries that muse on the circumstances of illness—a continued process of thinking through, rather than seeking to elide or explain. After an emotional lunchtime visit to her sister Vanessa in 1919, for example, during which she considered both her childlessness compared to Vanessa’s “overflowing household” as well as Macmillan’s decision not to reprint her second novel, Night and Day, for the American market, Woolf decided to “say something about these queer spiritual states,” which “interest me, even when I’m the subject” (D1: 298). She continues: The interesting thing is that one does, normally, keep up a kind of vibration, for no reason whatever. Equally for no reason whatever, the vibration stops. Then one enquires why one ever had it, & there seems no reason why one should ever have it again. Things seem clear, sane, comprehensible, & under no obligation, being of that nature, to make one vibrate at all. Indeed, its largely the clearness of sight which comes at such seasons that leads to depression. But when one can analyse it, one is half way back again. I feel unreason slowly tingling in my veins. If I could have a good morning’s work! (D1: 298) Many people feel themselves plunged into the choppy waters of depression; sometimes “for no reason whatever,” as Woolf writes, “the vibration stops.” Medicine can sometimes explain the cause of a mental break, a searing pain, or a blistering rash, and sometimes it cannot. How, after all, to measure the “tingling” of “unreason” in one’s veins? Via blood test? CAT scan? MRI? Sometimes people surface from the deep, and sometimes they do not. This is a fact. Virginia Woolf’s mental illness and eventual suicide are facts of her life, making up just one part of a story whose facets have been illuminated through the decades. I address both here only insofar as to say that I will not spend any more time speculating about how or why they occurred. Rather, I will focus on Woolf’s interior, day-to-day experiences of illness and 9 treatment, but more importantly, of recovery, and how all three influenced her creative process and shaped her self-conception as a writer.
Recommended publications
  • International Virginia Woolf Society Bibliography of Woolf Studies Published in 2009 (Includes Addenda for Previous Years)
    International Virginia Woolf Society Bibliography of Woolf Studies Published in 2009 (includes addenda for previous years) Compiled by Kathryn Klein, SUNY Stony Brook Please send additions to Celia Marshik, IVWS Historian/Bibliographer [email protected] BOOKS Barrett, Eileen, and Ruth O. Saxton, eds. Approaches to Teaching Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2009. Benton, Michael. Literary Biography: An Introduction. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2009. [See chapter 1, “Literary Biography Now and Then” and chapter 11, “Literary Lives: Scenes and Stories”] Brown, Judith. Glamour in Six Dimensions: Modernism and the Radiance of Form. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009. [See chapter 3, “Photography: Virginia Woolf, Grammar, Desire”] Caserio, Robert L., ed. The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel. Cambridge University Press, 2009. Clewall, Tammy. Mourning, Modernism, Postmodernism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. [See chapter 1, “Woolf and the Great War”] Crapoulet, Emilie. Virginia Woolf, a Musical Life. London: Cecil Woolf, 2009. Crosthwaite, Paul. Trauma, Postmodernism and the Aftermath of World War II. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. [See chapter 4, “Total War and the English Stream-of Consciousness Novel: from Mrs. Dalloway to Mother London”] Deer, Patrick. Culture in Camouflage: War, Empire, and Modern British Literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. [See section titled, “Virginia Woolf‟s „Thoughts on Peace‟” and “„Literature is the common ground‟: Virginia Woolf Outside the Leaning Tower”] Detloff, Madelyn. The Persistence of Modernism: Loss and Mourning in the Twentieth Century. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2009. [See chapter 1, “Woolf‟s Resilience” and chapter 6, “Orpheus, AIDS, and The Hours”] DiBattista, Maria.
    [Show full text]
  • The Posthumanistic Theater of the Bloomsbury Group
    Maine State Library Digital Maine Academic Research and Dissertations Maine State Library Special Collections 2019 In the Mouth of the Woolf: The Posthumanistic Theater of the Bloomsbury Group Christina A. Barber IDSVA Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalmaine.com/academic Recommended Citation Barber, Christina A., "In the Mouth of the Woolf: The Posthumanistic Theater of the Bloomsbury Group" (2019). Academic Research and Dissertations. 29. https://digitalmaine.com/academic/29 This Text is brought to you for free and open access by the Maine State Library Special Collections at Digital Maine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Academic Research and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Maine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. IN THE MOUTH OF THE WOOLF: THE POSTHUMANISTIC THEATER OF THE BLOOMSBURY GROUP Christina Anne Barber Submitted to the faculty of The Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy August, 2019 ii Accepted by the faculty at the Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts in partial fulfillment of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. COMMITTEE MEMBERS Committee Chair: Simonetta Moro, PhD Director of School & Vice President for Academic Affairs Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts Committee Member: George Smith, PhD Founder & President Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts Committee Member: Conny Bogaard, PhD Executive Director Western Kansas Community Foundation iii © 2019 Christina Anne Barber ALL RIGHTS RESERVED iv Mother of Romans, joy of gods and men, Venus, life-giver, who under planet and star visits the ship-clad sea, the grain-clothed land always, for through you all that’s born and breathes is gotten, created, brought forth to see the sun, Lady, the storms and clouds of heaven shun you, You and your advent; Earth, sweet magic-maker, sends up her flowers for you, broad Ocean smiles, and peace glows in the light that fills the sky.
    [Show full text]
  • Rethinking Virginia Woolf's on Being Ill Sarah Pett
    Rash Reading: Rethinking Virginia Woolf's On Being Ill Sarah Pett Literature and Medicine, Volume 37, Number 1, Spring 2019, pp. 26-66 (Article) Published by Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/lm.2019.0001 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/730823 Access provided at 20 Sep 2019 08:12 GMT from School of Oriental and African Studies This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. 26 RASH READING: RETHINKING VIRGINIA WOOLF’S ON BEING ILL Rash Reading: Rethinking Virginia Woolf’s On Being Ill Sarah Pett Though John Ruskin touches on the theme in “Fiction, Fair and Foul” (1880), Virginia Woolf’s On Being Ill is the first published essay devoted to the representation of illness in English literature.1 Written from Woolf’s sickbed in 1925 and published in various forms over the course of the following year, On Being Ill appears to have had limited contemporary impact, but today the piece is well known amongst Woolf scholars and those working on literary and other representations of illness.2 It is also regularly cited in illness memoirs of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, particularly those by doctors, academics, and writers already established in other genres. Renewed interest in the essay has been driven by two main factors, which represent two distinct approaches. Within literary studies, the essay has primarily benefited from a wider drive, beginning in the 1980s, to reappraise Woolf’s nonfiction writing. Outside of literary studies, its revival has been driven by the establishment of the medical humanities as a major academic field, with the essay finding favor amongst those interested in the biomedical model of disease and its alternatives; the cultural scripting of illness and the expansion of the illness memoir genre; and the introduction of a more holistic understanding of illness into healthcare practice, policy, and pedagogy.
    [Show full text]
  • Serving on the Eugenic Homefront: Virginia Woolf, Race, and Disability
    Serving on the Eugenic Homefront: Virginia Woolf, Race, and Disability Matt Franks Feminist Formations, Volume 29, Issue 1, Spring 2017, pp. 1-24 (Article) Published by Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/ff.2017.0001 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/658641 Access provided by West Georgia, Univ of (19 May 2017 20:19 GMT) Serving on the Eugenic Homefront: Virginia Woolf, Race, and Disability Matt Franks If eugenics was a “war against the weak,” as Edwin Black characterizes it, then interwar Britain was a homefront in the crusade against contagion from all sides: disabled, sexually perverse, working class, and nonwhite enemies at home in England and abroad in the colonies. I contend that modernists like Virginia Woolf enlisted dysgenic subjects to serve on the battlefield in order to lay the foundations for new, seemingly more inclusive, versions of eugenics and also to provide the raw material for the intellectual and bodily fragmentation of modernist aesthetics. I read this phenom- enon in Woolf’s own blackface, cross-dressing performance in the 1910 Dreadnought Hoax and in her 1927 novel To the Lighthouse. These examples demonstrate how the nation was beginning to recruit unfit subjects and put them on the frontlines of the war on degeneracy, rather than eliminate them. By demonstrating how such service members were nonetheless stripped of their worth and even sacrificed in battle, my reading of Woolf excavates the modernist roots of liberal biopolitics—or what I call the afterlife of eugenics. Keywords: biopolitics / colonialism / disability / eugenics / modernism / race In her 1926 essay On Being Ill, Virginia Woolf construes her experience of ill- ness as a refusal to serve on the battlefield of eugenics.
    [Show full text]
  • The Great Confessional: Virginia Woolf on Illness
    January 2006 Volume 6, No. 1 THE GREAT CONFESSIONAL: VIRGINIA WOOLF ON ILLNESS Cristóbal S. Berry-Cabán Introduction The success of Michael Cunnigham’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel (1998) and the Academy Award winning movie (2002) The Hours has brought Virginia W oolf to the forefront again. Illness plagued her throughout her life. Humans posses a tendency toward repeated and protracted illness that helps define who we are. In On Being Ill, Virginia Woolf lays the groundwork for what we now call pathography, first person accounts of one's illness exemplified by Sontag’s Illness as Metaphor (1977). Background In the opening scene of the novel and also the movie, it's late March 1941. Virginia Woolf has just finished writing a suicide note – to her husband Leonard. (She also wrote a second note to her sister, Vanessa.) Virginia Woolf, aged fifty-nine, leaves her home around 11:30 in the morning wearing a heavy winter coat, taking her walking stick, and crosses the meadows to the nearby River Ouse. At the banks of the river, she places a large stone in one of the pockets of her coat. Then, nonchalantly, she walks into the river. Her body was found by children three weeks later and cremated shortly thereafter. The verdict of the inquest was, "Suicide while the balance of her mind was disturbed." A finding often recorded for suicide victims by British coroners. Thus, death ended a lifetime of illnesses. Illness is a continuing thread of Virginia Woolf’s life. Breakdowns and suicide attempts throughout her lifetime are evidence of bipolar disorder that led, in the forty years of her adult writing life, to frequent bouts of illnesses, in which mental and physical symptoms intertwined (Jouve, 2000).
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction: Viriginia Woolf, European Essayist
    Notes Introduction: Viriginia Woolf, European Essayist 1 Arnold Bennett,' Is the Novel Decaying?' (1923), p. 47. 2 Maria DiBattista has provided a similar interpretation of this diary entry which she claims indicates `not so much that Woolf's center will not hold' but rather that it `eludes . the spirit's grasp' (The Fables of Anon (1980), p. 24). As DiBattista concentrates exclusively on the novels, her reading of this entry does not examine the link between this sense of reaching out without being able to grasp the true `reality' and the question of the essay, which I argue is essential to Woolf's own understanding of her artistic project. 3 Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse (1927), p. 28. 4 For examples of this conceptions of the essay see Orlo Williams, The Essay (n.d.) and Bonamy DobreÂe, English Essayists (1946). In The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters (1969), John Gross has offered a modified definition of this conjunction between the essay and the idea of the gentleman by identifying the belletrist with the unattached, freelance commentator on literary matters whose emergence and disappearance he traces from the early nineteenth century to the first half of the twentieth. In Gross's terms, the man of letter is defined by its opposition to the professional academic, much in the same way as the common reader stands in contrast to `the critic and the scholar' for Woolf (see especially Gross's 1991 Afterword). For a discussion of the idea of the common reader in relation to Woolf's essayistic practice see below, Chapter 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Vision, Perception, and Isolation in Virginia Woolf's Ill Characters By
    The Language of Illness: Vision, Perception, and Isolation in Virginia Woolf’s Ill Characters by Mary Demery A thesis presented for the B. A. degree With Honors in The Department of English University of Michigan Winter 2012 © March 19, 2012 Mary Demery Acknowledgements At the end of this yearlong process, the time comes to effusively thank those who have helped me all along. Thank you to John, first and foremost. This thesis couldn’t have been written without you. You were patient and encouraging and excited about my thesis from the beginning, and for that, I am deeply grateful. Thank you to Jennifer, for your calming cheerleading in class and your thorough, spirited reading of my work in all stages. Thank you to my parents for the constancy of your support. Though you were forty miles away, I felt it through the phone calls and the emails you sent my way. To my brothers and friends: thank you for listening to me talk and worry and vent about the thesis. Your open ears meant more to me than you know. Lastly, thank you to all the other English thesis-writers. I left our classes feeling creative and energized and, most importantly, part of a group, one of many approaching similar problems about wording and structure and argument. Thank you once more to everyone who has helped me out along the way. Abstract In Virginia Woolf’s work, illness is one of the ways she explores the territory that to this day marks her as a modernist writer; moreover, illness allows Woolf to experiment with language, through vivid and evocative imagery and language; through illness she also explores human communication, a theme of major significance in her oeuvre.
    [Show full text]
  • Still French? France and the Challenge of Diversity, 1985–2015 Nottingham French Studies Volume 54, Number 3
    Still French? France and the Challenge of Diversity, 1985–2015 Nottingham French Studies Volume 54, Number 3 Alec Hargreaves December 2015 Pb • 978 1 4744 0660 4 • £16.99 BIC: CFDM, JFFN, JHMC 128 pp 240 x 165 mm Dedicated to the entire range of French and Francophone studies Description The Editor In a provocative 1985 cover story featuring the face of Marianne obscured by an Alec Hargreaves, Formerly Director Islamic veil, Le Figaro Magazine asked: "Serons-nous encore français dans trente of the Winthrop-King Institute ans?". With those 30 years now spanned, where does France stand in relation to for Contemporary French and the fears, challenges and opportunities associated with changing perceptions Francophone Studies at Florida of ethnic and cultural diversity within and beyond the nation’s borders? Is the State University, and Head of the France of 2015 still French in the same way or to the same degree as the France Department of European Studies, of 1985? Where do the most significant challenges to "Frenchness" now lie? In Loughborough University, he has Islamism? In the "banlieues"? In European integration? In American hegemony? authored and edited numerous Is "Frenchness" itself, championed by political elites under the banner of publications on the cultural and "l’exception culturelle", an outmoded concept, destined to wither in the face political dynamics of postcolonialiam of transnational forces? These are among the issues addressed by contributors in the French-speaking world. to this volume, spanning a wide range of topics and disciplinary approaches including politics, literature, film and sport. Series Key Features Nottingham French Studies Special Issues • Multidisciplinary volume • Contributions by leading authorities on key aspects of current debates Readership • Offers a unique focus and comparison of developments within the past 30 years Scholars and students within and beyond French and Francophone Studies, including cultural studies, migration studies, contemporary history and world studies.
    [Show full text]
  • Virginia Woolf's Ethics
    Virginia Woolf’s Ethics and Victorian Moral Philosophy Christine Reynier Université Montpellier III- EMMA, France ABSTRACT In spite of her claim for modernity, Woolf’s work owes a lot to the Victorian tradition, especially, I will argue, to British moral philosophers. Moral philosophy, from the early Utilitarians to Sidgwick’s Methods of Ethics and Stephen’s Science of Ethics, will be shown to resonate in Woolf’s work. Basing my argument on “On Being Ill”, I will show that Woolf re- enacts in an original way the debates over morals and ethics that took place in Victorian times while responding to Moore’s philosophy as expounded in Principia Ethica and qualifying it, thus paving the way for later 20th-and 21st-century ethical theories. When Ann Banfield argued in The Phantom Table,1 that the debate about modernism should take into account its revolutionary conception of the objects of sensation and turned to Bertrand Russell’s 1914 theory of knowledge to do so, she challenged on the one hand the critics’ near ignorance of the Cambridge Apostles’ influence on Bloomsbury, and on the other, the “assumption of contemporary understanding of modernism—that the only philosophy of relevance to twentieth-century art and literature is continental.” 2 Following her example, daunting as it may be, I will challenge this last assumption and argue that the philosophy of relevance to the understanding of Woolf’s work is not necessarily continental but British. My purpose here will be to investigate the possible role of philosophers in the shaping of Woolf’s ethics, a field which has just begun to be charted.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading and Writing Chronic Illness, 1990-2012: Ethics and Aesthetics at Work
    Reading and Writing Chronic Illness, 1990-2012: Ethics and Aesthetics at Work Sarah Pett Doctor of Philosophy University of York Department of English and Related Literature January 2014 Abstract This thesis is about autobiographical and fictional accounts of chronic illness professionally published between 1990 and 2012. It begins with a survey of popular and critical thinking about illness accounts, in which I show how both the medical humanities and literary studies have placed restrictions on what these accounts can mean, and thus on the kinds of cultural work they can do: restrictions that frequently belie the complexity of the aesthetics and ethics at work in many of the texts considered in this thesis. I build on this claim through close reading of a cross- section of contemporary illness accounts in which I flag up the presence of aesthetic elements distinct to the literary—including aspects of imagery, form, symbolic structure, address, and so on—, and show how these elements work not just to underscore the informative content of these illness accounts, but also to create new patterns of meaning, new networks of relation, and new modes of engagement. Though this project focuses on the contemporary, Virginia Woolf’s essay On Being Ill (1926) acts as its theoretical nucleus. In chapter 2, I show how On Being Ill provides a productive framework within which to explore the relationship between illness, literary aesthetics, and ethics. I also tease out the themes that are to define the chapters that follow, for, as Woolf demonstrates, at stake in the representation of the embodied self and the sensations it experiences are issues such as the referentiality of language and of fiction; the workings of metaphor and allegory; and the possibilities and limitations of the discursive sediment that accrues around words, images, and narrative tropes.
    [Show full text]
  • Hearing Virginia Woolf's Novels
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Sydney eScholarship Hearing Virginia Woolf’s Novels: From The Voyage Out to Between the Acts Kunyan Wan A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences University of Sydney 26 July 2019 This is to certify that to the best of my knowledge, the content of this thesis is my own work. This thesis has not been submitted for any degree or other purpose. Contents Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Abstract Introduction 1 Chapter One 13 Sonic Imaginations and Modernist Soundscape Chapter Two 27 Unconscious Listening to Beethoven’s Music in The Voyage Out Chapter Three 50 “What about Beethoven?”: Listening to Ambient Sounds in Jacob’s Room Chapter Four 88 Synesthetic Listening in Mrs Dalloway and To the Lighthouse Chapter Five 133 Point and Sound in the “Silent Land” of The Waves Chapter Six 174 Hearing Elliptical Sounds in Between the Acts Conclusion 208 Bibliography 212 Acknowledgements I sincerely thank my supervisor A/Professor Mark Byron, who gives me persistent guidance, help and support, whether academically or spiritually, throughout the whole process of thesis writing. I am very grateful for his great patience throughout the revision process, providing me with useful and instructive suggestions whenever I met problems in writing, and always giving me generous encouragement and confidence to complete this project. In a word, without his unwavering and devoted supervision, the completion of this thesis would not have been possible.
    [Show full text]
  • 9780521882897Htl 1..2
    VIRGINIA WOOLF AND THE VICTORIANS Criticism of Woolf is often polarised into viewing her work as either fundamentally progressive or reactionary. In Virginia Woolf and the Victorians, Steve Ellis argues that her commitment to yet anxiety about modernity coexists with a nostalgia and respect for aspects of Victorian culture threatened by radical social change. Ellis tracks Woolf ’s response to the Victorian era through her fiction and other writings, arguing that Woolf can be seen as more ‘Post-Victorian’ than ‘modernist’. He explains how Woolf’s emphasis on continuity and reconciliation related to twentieth- century debates about Victorian values, and he analyses her response to the First World War as the major threat to that continuity. This detailed and original investigation of the range of Woolf ’s writing attends to questions of cultural and political history and fictional structure, imagery and diction. It proposes a new reading of Woolf ’s thinking about the relationships between the past, present and future. STEVE ELLIS is Professor of English Literature at the University of Birmingham. VIRGINIA WOOLF AND THE VICTORIANS STEVE ELLIS CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521882897 © Steve Ellis 2007 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provision of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
    [Show full text]