A Feminist Public Sphere? Virginia Woolf's Revisions of the Eighteenth Century

Uses Virginia Woolf's career as a case study for exploring the possibilities of having a feminist voice affect the public sphere. Focusing on Woolf's work as both a journalist and fiction writer, argues that Woolf sought to participate in public debate and be recognized as a respected main...

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Veröffentlicht in:Feminist studies 2005-04, Vol.31 (1), p.158-182
1. Verfasser: Fernald, Anne E.
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description Uses Virginia Woolf's career as a case study for exploring the possibilities of having a feminist voice affect the public sphere. Focusing on Woolf's work as both a journalist and fiction writer, argues that Woolf sought to participate in public debate and be recognized as a respected mainstream cultural authority without giving up her feminism or her independence of mind. Suggests that central to Woolf's approach was her desire to prove that a woman and a feminist could make a living, claim mainstream cultural authority, and reshape public discourse. (Original abstract - amended)
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects 20th century
British & Irish literature
Careers
Case studies
Conversation
Criticism and interpretation
Eccentric behavior
English literature
Feminism
Feminist theory
Feminists
Fiction
Gender
Gender relations
Hardy, Thomas (1840-1928)
History
Independence
Journal writing
Journalism
Journalists
Literary criticism
Literary works
Literature
Media
Men
Modernism
Modernist art
Perceptions
Public domain
Public sphere
Reporters
Revisions
Subversion
Women
Women authors
Women writers
Women's work
Woolf, Virginia
Woolf, Virginia (1882-1941)
Writers
Writing
title A Feminist Public Sphere? Virginia Woolf's Revisions of the Eighteenth Century
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