Who Lived at Alfoxton?: Virginia Woolf and English RomanticismBucknell University Press, 1998 - 299 頁 This study turns the critical conversation about Virginia Woolf from its current feminist and postmodernist course. It "recanonizes" her by acknowledging her debt to English Romanticism, particularly Wordsworth, and by placing her in the cultural landscape of the early twentieth century as an experimenter whose subjects and forms were modeled on the rich legacy of the past. Politically and aesthetically, she was in the mold of the early Western European democrats and not "a guerilla fighter in Victorian skirts." The author draws on the full range of Woolf's writing - her short stories, essays, novels, diaries, and letters - to examine her unique translation of the Romantic dyad of self and world. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 46 筆
第 93 頁
... perhaps meant this when he said a great mind is androgynous . It is when this fusion takes place that the mind is fully fertilised and uses all its faculties . Perhaps a mind that is purely mascu- line cannot create , any more than a ...
... perhaps meant this when he said a great mind is androgynous . It is when this fusion takes place that the mind is fully fertilised and uses all its faculties . Perhaps a mind that is purely mascu- line cannot create , any more than a ...
第 98 頁
... perhaps because by doing so I take away the pain , a great delight to put the severed parts together . Perhaps this is the strongest pleasure known to me . It is the rapture I get when in writing I seem to be discovering what belongs to ...
... perhaps because by doing so I take away the pain , a great delight to put the severed parts together . Perhaps this is the strongest pleasure known to me . It is the rapture I get when in writing I seem to be discovering what belongs to ...
第 139 頁
... Perhaps the fault lies in Woolf's acknowledgment that Defoe is mixed with the root of her earliest life , with her childhood " impressions . . . that last longest and cut deepest " ( CR , 86 ) . Having had Robinson Crusoe read to her as ...
... Perhaps the fault lies in Woolf's acknowledgment that Defoe is mixed with the root of her earliest life , with her childhood " impressions . . . that last longest and cut deepest " ( CR , 86 ) . Having had Robinson Crusoe read to her as ...
常見字詞
aesthetic artist assertion beauty become beginning belief Bernard character common connection consciousness continuity create creative critical cultural death describes desire Diary Edited Elizabethan emotion English essay experience expression eyes fact fall father feel fiction figure flowers forces give hand human ideas images imagination importance interest Joan language letters light Lighthouse Lily literary literature lives looked Mark meaning memory metaphor mind moment moments narrative nature never novel one's ordinary Passes past pattern perhaps poem poet poetic poetry political possible present Press question Ramsay reader reading reality record relation reveals Romantic Romanticism says seems self-consciousness sense Stephen story suggests thing thought tion transformation truth unconscious University Press Virginia Woolf voice Waves whole woman women Wordsworth writing written wrote York