Search Results - "Virginia Woolf"

Refine Results
  1. 1
  2. 2

    Virginia Woolf and her doctors by Trombley, Stephen

    Published 1980
    Subjects: “…Virginia Woolf…”
    Get full text
  3. 3

    Waxing into words: Virginia Woolf and the Westminster Abbey funeral effigies by Kore Schroder, Leena

    Published 2013
    “…The Abbey wax figures fascinated Virginia Woolf throughout her life and make multiple cameo appearances in her work. …”
    Get full text
  4. 4

    Writing the author: Sylvia Plath, Henry James, Virginia Woolf and the biographical novel by Hudson, Elaine C.

    Published 2015
    “…Through the exemplary figures of Sylvia Plath, Henry James and Virginia Woolf and their corresponding biographical novels, I draw together a core body of texts to demonstrate their unity as a literary form. …”
    Get full text
  5. 5
  6. 6

    Virginia Woolf's new intellectualism in relation to the construction of a third gender based on desire in her selected works by Montashery, Iraj

    Published 2012
    “…In A Room of One’s Own (1929), Virginia Woolf subversively urges that “we think back through our mothers if we are women” (132); this radical belief which was uncommon in Woolf’s time turned out to be her lifelong commitment in her literary life, and which formulated a new form of intellectualism. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  7. 7
  8. 8

    Navigating Eros and Thanatos: a genre and appraisal analysis of Virginia Woolf’s suicide note and John Keats’ last letter by Sadia Irshad, Sajid Ali, Shah Muhammad

    Published 2025
    “…The texts selected for this analysis are Virginia Woolf's suicide note and John Keats's last letter to his friend Charles Brown. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  9. 9
  10. 10

    Urban spaces, fragmented consciousness, and indecipherable meaning in Mrs Dalloway by Harrison, Andrew

    Published 2014
    “…This essay discusses the importance of urban spaces in Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway, linking them to central themes in the novel (including the fragmented consciousness of the characters, and withheld - or only partially understood - meaning).…”
    Get full text
  11. 11

    ‘As with everything else the end eventually comes …’ Or, how prose might work to capture a sensation of the past by Juckes, Daniel James

    Published 2018
    “…It is a family memoir which addresses how a sensation of the past might be evoked, with a focus on the prose of Virginia Woolf, W.G. Sebald, and Marcel Proust. The research uses objects from the past to describe the seamlessness of memory and perception, and describes a way in which the past’s vitality might be represented on the page.…”
    Get full text
  12. 12

    The Controversy Of Sciences: Humanities Revisited by S. Sultan, Sabbar

    Published 2008
    “…The fifth section discusses Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. The last section deals with the contribution of the post-modernistic writers to this controversy.…”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  13. 13

    Rokeya from a comparative literary perspective by Hasan, Md. Mahmudul

    Published 2018
    “…IN MY doctoral study titled Introducing Rokeya’s Plural Feminism (University of Portsmouth, 2007), I sought to unearth the rich treasure of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain’s (1880–1932) feminist writing and to compare it with that of two established English feminist writers, Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797) and Virginia Woolf (1882–1941), and two postcolonial ones Attia Hosain (1913-98) and Monica Ali (1967). …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  14. 14

    Rokeya and Woolf: souls that have lived by Hasan, Md. Mahmudul

    Published 2018
    “…There are some amazing similarities between the Bengali writer Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain (1880-1932) and her English counterpart Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) that will make you wonder whether every great soul that has ever lived experiences the same dimension of reality in different shapes. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  15. 15

    Rokeya and woolf: souls that have lived by Hasan, Md. Mahmudul

    Published 2018
    “…There are some amazing similarities between the Bengali writer Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain (1880-1932) and her English counterpart Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) that will make you wonder whether every great soul that has ever lived experiences the same dimension of reality in different shapes. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  16. 16

    Females in Fetters: The Patriarchal World in Catherine Lim' S Selected Works by Ong, Siok Hong

    Published 2001
    “…In my opinion, Lim's feminist stance parallels those of leading feminists such as Virginia Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir and Kate Millett. This study offers a fascinating understanding of her narratives as a platform for social comment.…”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  17. 17

    Metadiscourse as a way of achieving persuasion in literary criticism texts by AlJazrawi, Dunya, AlJazrawi, Zeena

    Published 2021
    “…The data of 72,727 words from 17 texts were written by three well-known authors, namely, T.S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf and Stanley Fish. Hyland’s (2005) model of interpersonal metadiscourse markers was used to analyze the data. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  18. 18

    Becoming someone: Paula Modersohn-Becker, the city and the construction of self by Sabin, Kellie

    Published 2023
    “…Utilising her self-portraits and Parisian street scene sketches, it is argued that that the identity of flâneuse was available to Modersohn-Becker by associating female flânerie with the literary model of Virginia Woolf’s narrator in Street Haunting (1930) as opposed to the paradigmatic archetype represented by Baudelaire’s anxious Man of the Crowd. …”
    Get full text
  19. 19

    Islamic perspectives on twentieth-century English literature by Hasan, Md. Mahmudul

    Published 2017
    “…The arguments in this book show the concrete relevance of Islam to issues discussed in the selected works of major authors of twentieth-century English literature, such as: Joseph Conrad (1857 – 1924), Rudyard Kipling (1865 – 1936), Virginia Woolf (1882 – 1941), T. S. Eliot (1888 – 1965), W. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  20. 20

    Ballads from Bangladesh: an anthology of poems (translated by Helal Uddin Ahmed and introduced by Syed Manzoorul Islam: Dhaka: Sucheepatra, February 2009) by Hasan, Md. Mahmudul

    Published 2009
    “…Literary production is not primarily driven, and its worth determined, by people’s economic status or political strength/weakness, although Virginia Woolf has a different view on that. It is a spontaneous expression of human feelings and is produced in every society, in every culture. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text