
“Modern Fiction.” The Common Reader, 1925, Project Gutenberg of Australia. “Virginia Woolf and Modernism.” Roe and Sellers, pp. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000.

The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf. Theorists of the Modernist Novel: James Joyce, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf. “Woolf’s Feminism and Feminism’s Woolf.” Roe and Sellers, pp. “Biomythographers: Rewriting the Lives of Virginia Woolf.” Essays in Criticism, vol. “An Introduction to To the Lighthouse.” British Library,. “The Novels of the 1930s and the Impact of History.” Roe and Sellers, pp. This is an affiliate link for which we may receive a commission.īriggs, Julia. Literate will be back in January with a new season! In 1996, she published a landmark biography of Virginia Woolf, and her most recent biography, Tom Stoppard: A Life, came out last month.

She is one of the most highly acclaimed literary biographers in the English-speaking world. Then, we interview Professor Dame Hermione Lee, who was President of Wolfson College from 2008 to 2017 and is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Oxford University. She has published on literary modernism and Woolf, and is preparing the first scholarly edition of Woolf’s memoir A Sketch of the Past. Urmila Seshagiri, who is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. First we hear an extended reflection from Dr. We could not be more delighted to introduce this week’s expert guests. Through a language at once impressionistic and precise, Woolf depicts currents of thought and feeling, while raising questions about patriarchy, tradition, and the woman as artist. It’s also a story about the fluidity of perspective, drawing readers into the perceptions and interior lives of its characters as they relate to one another and the world.

It’s a story about love, family, loss, and growing up.

Let your imagination set sail in this discussion of Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse in the final episode of our first season.
