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A Room of Ones own

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People's feelings were impressed upon her; personal relations were always before ... would be marred by 'indignation' and would come out 'deformed and twisted' (69) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Room of Ones own


1
A Room of Ones own
  • (4)

2
Female ancestors
  • Woolf reinforces her premise that women in the
    sixteenth century were unable to write because
    the social environment necessary for greatness
    was denied to them. She says that while it was
    presumably easier for women from wealthy families
    than it was for others less fortunate, obstacles
    such as public opinion were still, in most cases,
    insurmountable. She then quotes from a poem by
    Lady Winchilsea which addresses this very issue
    "Alas! A woman that attempts the pen, / Such a
    presumptuous creature is esteemed / The fault by
    no virtue can be redeemed" (57). Woolf explains
    that Lady Winchilsea was restricted by adverse
    social conditions and notes that her writing was
    therefore "disturbed by alien emotions like fear
    and hatred" (58).Woolf then turns to the work
    of another female writer, Margaret Cavendish, and
    notes regretfully that her gifts suffered from a
    lack of formal education. Although Woolf
    expresses admiration for the spirit in her work,
    she reports that Ms. Cavendish ultimately
    "frittered her time away scribbling nonsense and
    plunging ever deeper into obscurity and folly"
    (60).

3
Aphra Behn
  • Finally Woolf comments on the career of the
    working-class widow, Mrs. (Aphra) Behn, who
    earned money by selling her stories. She explains
    that women would have been discouraged from
    resembling the rather coarse Mrs. Behn but
    applauds her for setting an encouraging precedent
    for women of all classes. Women and Fiction
    Woolf explains that it was because of the efforts
    of these women and others like them that writing
    finally joined the rather short list of genteel
    professions by which a young lady could
    "legitimately" earn an income.

4
Women / novels
  • Woolf argues that the fact that writing gained
    acceptance as a suitable occupation for
    middle-class ladies made possible the emergence
    of the female novelists of the nineteenth century
    (George Eliot, the Bronte sisters, and Jane
    Austen). Woolf is struck by the fact that once
    women began to write, they were almost
    exclusively drawn to the production of novels
    she suggests that this was because they did not
    have private rooms in which to work. Arguing that
    novels demand less sustained concentration than
    poetry or drama, Woolf indicates that this genre
    could better withstand the constant interruptions
    that came with writing in the common sitting
    room.

5
Feminine issues
  • Woolf reinforces her premise that artists (and
    particularly writers) require concentration and
    thus solitude in which to create. Because women
    were traditionally expected to care for the
    family and the home, they were denied this kind
    of extended privacy Woolf suggests that the
    subject matter dealt with by the
    nineteenth-century women novelists was impressed
    upon them by society at large "All the
    literary training that a woman had in the early
    nineteenth century was training in the
    observation of character, in the analysis of
    emotion. Her sensibility had been educated for
    centuries by the influences of the common
    sitting-room. People's feelings were impressed
    upon her personal relations were always before
    her eyes" (64). In other words, women were
    expected to write about "feminine issues"
    family, relationships, emotion, and so
    forth.Woolf's consideration of the
    nineteenth-century women novelists is not
    entirely meant as a critique, however. Looking at
    Jane Austen, for instance, Woolf finds that the
    limiting context of this writer's artistry could
    be employed as a strength.

6
Austen / Charlotte Bronte
  • Women and Fiction According to Woolf's analysis,
    Jane Austen's temperament was perfectly expressed
    in her novels. Woolf admits, "I could not find
    any signs that her circumstances had harmed her
    work in the slightest. . . . Here was a woman
    about the year 1800 writing without hate, without
    bitterness, without fear, without protest,
    without preaching" (65). Woolf celebrates
    Austen's ability to write without bitterness but
    acknowledges that it was a happy coincidence that
    her temperament was so ideally suited to her
    situation and the subject matter available to
    her.In comparing Charlotte Bronte to Jane
    Austen, however, Woolf recognizes that the
    restrictions placed on women and women's writing
    could have terrible artistic effects. Women
    and Fiction Woolf finds that Charlotte Bronte's
    work suffered from the restrictions placed upon
    its author she perceives Bronte as being
    possessed of "more genius" than Austen, but the
    fact that this talent was forcibly pent-up meant
    that Bronte's writing would be marred by
    "indignation" and would come out "deformed and
    twisted" (69). Although Woolf sympathizes with
    Bronte's longing to experience life beyond her
    small domestic sphere, she judges the work itself
    objectively and concludes that it has suffered.

7
Feminine writing
  • Woolf then turns her attention to the form of the
    novel as it has developed over the nineteenth and
    early twentieth centuries and reports that it
    tends to be stylized and predictable. She argues
    that the only way a novel can transcend its
    formal limitations is if it is written with
    integrity and reveals the truth about life.
    Because of the demand for integrity, Woolf argues
    that female novelists were on most solid ground
    when they wrote about the subject matter in their
    own limited experience. Women and Fiction
    Woolf admits that women's lives and "interests"
    were considered trivial in comparison to those of
    men, which made it inevitable that their writing
    would be deemed less important as well.

8
Female tradition
  • Woolf points out yet another obstacle for female
    writers of the nineteenth century, namely the
    lack of a literary tradition upon which to draw.
  • Thinking back through our mothers (72)
  • She explains "It is useless to go to the great
    men writers for help, however much one may go to
    them for pleasure" (73).

9
Future of writing
  • Women and Fiction Woolf explains that women will
    need to create their own tradition of writing and
    predicts that women will have to develop a new
    form which suits their natural abilities. In an
    attempt to define such a new genre, she suggests
    that women's books "should be shorter, more
    concentrated, than those of men, and framed so
    that they do not need long hours of steady and
    uninterrupted work. For interruptions there will
    always be" (74).
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