BIOGRAPHY
OF VIRGINIA WOOLF (5)
Born: January 25,
1882
Died: March 28, 1941
English novelist, critic, and essayist
The English
novelist, critic, and essayist Virginia Woolf ranks as one of
Early years and marriage
Virginia Stephen
was born in
In 1912, eight
years after her father's death,
Virginia Woolf's
home in
As critic and essayist
Virginia Woolf
began writing essays for the Times Literary Supplement (
An essay
frequently studied is "Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown," written in
Virginia Woolf.
Reproduced by permission of
AP/Wide World Photos
.
which Virginia Woolf described the manner in which the
older-generation novelist Arnold Bennett would have portrayed Mrs. Brown, a
lady casually met in a railway carriage, by giving her a house and furniture
and a position in the world. She then contrasted this method with another: one
that exhibits a new interest in Mrs. Brown, the mysteries of her person, her
consciousness (awareness), and the consciousness of the observer responding to
her.
Achievement as novelist
Two of Virginia
Woolf's novels in particular, Mrs. Dalloway (1925) and To the
Lighthouse (1927), successfully follow the latter approach. The first novel
covers a day in the life of Mrs. Dalloway in postwar
London; it achieves its vision of reality through the reception by Mrs.
Dalloway's mind of what Virginia Woolf called those "myriad
impressions—trivial, fantastic, evanescent [vanishing], or engraved with the
sharpness of steel."
To the Lighthouse is,
in a sense, a family portrait and history rendered in subjective (characterized
by personal views) depth through selected points in time. Part I deals with the
time between six o'clock in the evening and dinner. Primarily through the
consciousness of Mrs. Ramsay, it presents the clash of the male and female
sensibilities in the family; Mrs. Ramsay functions as a means of balance and
settling disputes. Part II is a moving section of loss during the interval
between Mrs. Ramsay's death and the family's revisit to the house. Part III
moves toward completion of this complex portrait through the adding of a last
detail to a painting by an artist guest, Lily Briscoe, and through the final
completion of a plan, rejected by the father in Part I, for him and the children
to sail out to the lighthouse.
Last years and other books
Virginia Woolf
was the author of about fifteen books, the last, A Writer's Diary,
posthumously (after death) published in 1953. Her death by drowning in Lewes,
Sussex, England, on March 28, 1941, has often been regarded as a suicide
brought on by the unbearable strains of life during World War II (1939–45; a
war fought between the Axis powers: Japan, Italy, and Germany—and the Allies:
France, England, the Soviet Union, and the United States). The true explanation
seems to be that she had regularly felt symptoms of a mental breakdown and
feared it would be permanent.
Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and Jacob's
Room (1922) represent Virginia Woolf's major achievements. The Voyage
Out (1915) first brought her critical attention. Night and Day
(1919) is traditional in method. The short stories of Monday or Tuesday
(1921) brought critical praise. In The Waves (1931) she masterfully
employed the stream-of-consciousness technique which stresses "free writing."
Other experimental novels include Orlando
(1928), The Years (1937), and Between the Acts (1941). Virginia
Woolf's championship of women's rights is reflected in the essays in A Room
of One's Own (1929) and in Three Guineas (1938).
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