Browsing by Subject "Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941 -- Criticism and interpretation"
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- Item"A line there, in the centre": Temporality, Narrative, and the Rewriting of Loss in 'To the Lighthouse'(2012) Emery, Lydia F.; Benston, Kimberly W.
- ItemChildren of Flux: The Individual and Collective Consciousness in Virginia Woolf's The Waves(2005) Mesner-Hage, Jesse; Finley, C. Stephen
- ItemExposed on this Bleak Eminence: The Poetics of Shellshock(2005) Van Ogtrop, Mary; McInerney, Maud Burnett
- Item“I Now, I Then”: The Ecstatic Moment, Real Time and the Narration of Self in Virginia Woolf’s The Waves.(2016) Wingfield, Sarah; Mohan, Rajeswari
- Item(In)sane Dissolution of Illusion: Trauma, Boundary, and Recovery in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway(2006) McDonald, Jessica J.; Finley, C. StephenUsing Freudian psychoanalysis and trauma theory to read Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway as a text of recovery battling the trauma of the Great War, this essay examines Woolf's characterization of Septimus as a victim of shell-shock and his liminal position within society. Figuring prominently in this analysis are the shifting of temporalities and the elimination of boundaries, ultimately allowing the simultaneous blurring and juxtaposition of Septimus and Clarissa to create a collective testament to the egregious error of presumed immunity to war.
- ItemLife Actually and the Human Undone: Sensation, Ecstasy, and Madness in Virginia Woolf's The Waves(2017) Hoogstraten, Chris; Parris, Benjamin