Mrs. Dalloway

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Author: Virginia Woolf

ISBN-10: 3596140021

ISBN-13: 9783596140022

Category: Literary Styles & Movements - Fiction

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This brilliant novel explores the hidden springs of thought and action in one day of a woman’s life. Direct and vivid in her account of the details of Clarissa Dalloway’s preparations for a party she is to give that evening, Woolf ultimately managed to reveal much more. For it is the feeling behind these daily events that gives Mrs. Dalloway its texture and richness and makes it so memorable. Foreword by Maureen Howard."Mrs. Dalloway was the first novel to split the atom. If the novel before Mrs. Dalloway aspired to immensities of scope and scale, to heroic journeys across vast landscapes, with Mrs. Dalloway Virginia Woolf insisted that it could also locate the enormous within the everyday; that a life of errands and party-giving was every bit as viable a subject as any life lived anywhere; and that should any human act in any novel seem unimportant, it has merely been inadequately observed. The novel as an art form has not been the same since. "Mrs. Dalloway also contains some of the most beautiful, complex, incisive and idiosyncratic sentences ever written in English, and that alone would be reason enough to read it. It is one of the most moving, revolutionary artworks of the twentieth century."—Michael Cunningham, author of The HoursNew York Times Book ReviewVirginia Woolf stands as the chief figure of modernism in England and must be included with Joyce and Proust in the realization of experiments that have completely broken with tradition.

AcknowledgementsGeneral Editors' PrefaceIntroduction11Virginia Woolf232Figures of Desire: Narration and Fiction in To the Lighthouse333Mrs Dalloway: Repetition as Raising of the Dead454Repression in Mrs Dalloway's London575Hume, Stephen, and Elegy in To the Lighthouse716Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Feminist readings of Woolf877Mrs Dalloway988'Cam the Wicked': Woolf's Portrait of the Artist as her Father's Daughter1129Mothers and Daughters in Virginia Woolf's Victorian Novel13010Thinking Forward Through Mrs Dalloway's Daughter142Further Reading156Notes on Contributors162Index164