Virginia Woolf photograph

Virginia Woolf

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Gender Female
Death83 years ago
Date of birth January 25,1882
Zodiac sign Aquarius
Born Kensington
London
United Kingdom
Date of died March 28,1941
DiedLewes
United Kingdom
Short stories The String Quartet
The Mark on the Wall
Kew Gardens
The New Dress
The Duchess and the Jeweller
The Widow and the Parrot
Height 170 (cm)
Job Author
Novelist
Critic
Publisher
Essayist
Movies/Shows Orlando
Mrs. Dalloway
To the Lighthouse
A Room of One's Own
Golven
Simple Gifts
Vita & Virginia
Mrs Dalloway
Spouse Leonard Woolf
Siblings Vanessa Bell
George Herbert Duckworth
Gerald Duckworth
Parents Julia Stephen
Leslie Stephen
NationalityBritish
English
Full nameAdeline Virginia Stephen
Influences James Joyce
William Shakespeare
Marcel Proust
Emily Brontë
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID403144

The Waves
Monday or Tuesday
Three Guineas
The Voyage Out
Between the Acts
Flush: A Biography
Jacob's Room
A Haunted House and Other Short Stories
The Years
Kew Gardens
The Mark on the Wall
Moments of Being
Night and Day
La Mort de la Phalène
A Writer's Diary
The common reader
On Being Ill
The diary of Virginia Woolf
The Letters of Virginia Woolf
Roger Fry: A Biography
Melymbrosia
Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown
Street haunting
The London Scene
Granite and Rainbow
The Lady in the Looking Glass
The Pargiters
The Captain's Death Bed
Women & Fiction
The complete shorter fiction of Virginia Woolf ; edited by Susan Dick
On Not Knowing Greek
Women and writing
Nurse Lugton's Curtain
The New Dress
The widow and the parrot
The Duchess and the Jeweller
Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid
The Complete Works of Virginia Woolf
An Unwritten Novel
Killing the angel in the house
The essays of Virginia Woolf
Pointz Hall
Proua Dalloway
Crowded Dance of Modern Life Uk
Mrs Dalloway
A Room of One's Own
To the Lighthouse
Orlando: A Biography
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Virginia Woolf Life story


Adeline Virginia Woolf was an English writer. She is considered one of the most important modernist 20th-century authors and a pioneer in the use of stream of consciousness as a narrative device.

Emma Corrin: Oscar categories should be gender neutral

Emma Corrin: Oscar categories should be gender neutral
Nov 25,2022 1:11 am

... The move followed similar steps by and Corrin s comments come as they prepare to take to the stage in an adaptation of Virginia Woolf s novel Orlando, which was published in 1928 and explores gender identity...

US court blocks Penguin merger with Simon & Schuster

US court blocks Penguin merger with Simon & Schuster
Nov 1,2022 1:21 am

... Penguin has worked with celebrated authors including Sylvia Plath, George Orwell, Leo Tolstoy and Virginia Woolf...

Emilie Pine: The novelist putting autism centre stage

Emilie Pine: The novelist putting autism centre stage
May 5,2022 5:00 am

... I thought in that moment of decision about allowing myself to write: Well, I m going to write the books that I love, in a style that I love reading, and why not aim high? And Mrs Dalloway [Virginia Woolf] is probably more of an influence...

Rosie Kay: Dancers write open letter to choreographer after gender row

Rosie Kay: Dancers write open letter to choreographer after gender row
Dec 11,2021 4:30 am

... Late into the evening, the conversation got " heated" according to Kay, as they discussed the next show she was planning, based on Virginia Woolf s Orlando - a novel about a poet who changes from a man to a woman...

Vienna opera house stages first opera by woman

Vienna opera house stages first opera by woman
Feb 16,2020 8:59 am

... Austrian composer Olga Neuwirth has written a new opera based on Virginia Woolf s 1928 novel Orlando which deals with themes of gender fluidity and duality...

Paul Robeson's Othello: How stage passion spilled into real life

Paul Robeson's Othello: How stage passion spilled into real life
Feb 16,2020 4:56 am

... And of course she d been the original Martha in Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? But I only really knew that teaching perspective and she never had a film career - so I find young British actors don t always know her...

Emilie Pine: The novelist putting autism centre stage

Feb 16,2020 4:56 am

Writer and academic Emilie Pine tells me she likes a challenge, and taking up a post as writer-in-residence at a maternity Hospital - having endured The Pain of infertility - certainly sounds like one.

The Dublin professor won plaudits for her searingly honest autobiographical essay collection, Notes to Self, published in 2019, which explored her own experiences of infertility and miscarriage, among other topics.

She was recently

For her highly anticipated debut novel, Ruth & Pen, Pine returns to the theme of baby loss, examining one couple's painful infertility journey, as it puts a solid and loving marriage on The Brink .

The Novel follows Two Women - you've guessed it, Ruth & Pen - during a single day in Dublin. Ruth is a 30-something therapist who is on The Verge of Breaking Up with her husband following several failed IVF attempts and a miscarriage. Teenager Pen has autism and is struggling to Find Her place in The World .

The pair are strangers but cross paths briefly as they go about their day in the bustling city, against the backdrop of a Climate Change protest.

The idea for The Novel came to Pine when she was writer-in-residence at Dublin's National Maternity Hospital . Given the painful infertility Pine and her partner have endured themselves, the decision to place herself in a maternity Hospital may sound to many like a unique form of self-punishment.

" It felt like a challenge. And I don't like to back down from a challenge. It was…very, very difficult to be in The Building and to have this space that was away from the labour wards, but I would have to walk through the labour wards to leave.

" I hadn't anticipated how hard that would be on a daily basis. And I'm really glad I did it. I went into The Hospital with the mindset of a patient and with my experience… (then) I started to understand it as an institution from The Point of view of people who worked there. "

Set in Dublin over 24 hours, the characters traverse the City Streets , meeting various people along The Way . So, just how much of an influence was James Joyce and modernist literature?

" It was totally conscious! " Pine laughs. " I love it. I thought in that moment of decision about allowing myself to write: 'Well, I'm going to write The Books that I love, in a style that I love reading, and Why Not Aim High ?' And Mrs Dalloway [Virginia Woolf ] is probably more of an influence.

" But Ulysses is … the context in which anything written about Dublin just feels like it's being written within. And I work in University College Dublin, which is Joyce's Alma Mater . It's a really rich context to work in.

" The ending of Ruth & Pen very much resonates with the ending of Ulysses. But I also took Ulysses and I put it really Far Away from me while I was writing so that I didn't have to look at it. It's there, but it's like The Unconscious . "

While The Narrative is largely written from Ruth's Perspective - not least the brutal physical experience of her miscarriage - Pine says it was also important to give Ruth's husband Aidan a Voice - and he has been given several chapters of his own.

" Part of my experience of being based in The Hospital was to see how much Women are identified as the primary parent and as primary sufferer. Aidan says at one point that he wasn't entitled to counselling in The Hospital without Ruth being present. "

While she had her own experience to draw on for Ruth, Pine had more research to do for Pen and Her Story , which runs in parallel with Ruth's: " I'm going to sound like one of those floaty people which I'm really not, but I just knew that Pen was autistic.

" I Am sick of characters who have anything interesting about them being on the on the margins, right? And it's the same with infertile Women . They're The Weird aunt at The Party , but not the centre of The Party . And so (it's about) moving characters who are so often marginalised into the centre, and allowing them agency. You see The World through Pen's eyes, I hope. "

Teenage sex

last month, Adriana White discussed The Stereotypes and tropes of autistic characters, including the " annoying sibling/sidekick" and the " unrealistic inspiration".

Pen is none of those - for a start she's female when characters with autism are more often than not male. She's a fully formed protagonist with her own narrative and sense of self, her own dreams and aspirations which sit alongside her struggles.

Pen has a supportive mother and a solid friendship with Alice, which she would like to become Something More . She grapples with noise, crowds and anxiety, has been bullied at school and has previously self-harmed.

" Pen is a teenager, and I had written about My Own crazy teenage life in Notes to Self, but I also wanted to represent that not all 16-year-olds are having sex but they might be wanting to or thinking about it. It's this moment where you're on The Border between childhood and adulthood, and how you're negotiating that, and how that's difficult. "

In The Final chapter, Pen has a moment of reflection when she says " there is no normal".

As A Society , are we shifting away from one rigid idea of normal?

'Compulsory motherhood'

" I think We Are but I think it's slow and there's a long way to go. I also think that The People who are shifting it are bearing all of the cost and emotional labour of doing it, and often that has a huge impact on their lives. So, I think the more that can be part of a shared, open, multiple-Perspective conversation, the better. "

Perhaps The Most powerful moment in The Novel is when Ruth and Pen, who are strangers, come across each other in a gallery. Ruth stops to help Pen, who is having a Panic Attack . Ruth may not be able to physically be A Mother but that doesn't stop her from being a motherly figure.

" There's that sense of Ruth just being exactly who Pen needs in that moment. And it's an act of deep care Between Strangers . And I love that, " Pine says.

" Ruth can be a meaningful, caring person without having this dimension [being A Mother ]. The Sense of compulsory motherhood that comes through culturally so often is something that I think is really oppressive, and makes it incredibly difficult when you're in The Position of not becoming a parent when you want to be one. "

For Pine , writing her First Novel has been something of a liberating experience.

" When My Life didn't turn out The Way I wanted it to, in terms of having children, I think that forces a conversation. It's not that The Novel is My Baby , but more that I really wanted to imagine myself in a new way, and this has been a huge part of that. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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