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Virginia Woolf (Penguin Lives)

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Bloomsbury at HomeBloomsbury at Home by Pamela Todd

Fascination with the Bloomsbury group continues unabated. This famous circle of friends-Virginia and Leonard Woolf, Vanessa Bell, Maynard Keynes, Lytton Strachey, Dora Carrington, Duncan Grant, and others-has become synonymous with devotion to the arts, acerbic wit, liberal ideas, and outrageous sexual frankness. In Bloomsbury at Home, for the first time, readers can experience this group visually-through their paintings, sketches, family photographs, and new photography of their homes and studios.

Pamela Todd takes readers inside this notorious circle of British writers and artists for an intimate look at their private lives, their elaborate parties, and their unconventional homes and domestic arrangements. Using generous quotations from their diaries and letters, Todd re-creates life among this memorable group of individuals who dared to defy the restrictions of polite London society at the turn of the 20th century-and who still arouse interest and curiosity today.

100 illustrations, 80 in full color, 8 1\8 x 10 1/2"

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The HoursThe Hours by Michael Cunningham

The Hours is both an hommage to Virginia Woolf and very much its own creature. Even as Michael Cunningham brings his literary idol back to life, he intertwines her story with those of two more contemporary women. One gray suburban London morning in 1923, Woolf awakens from a dream that will soon lead to Mrs. Dalloway. In the present, on a beautiful June day in Greenwich Village, 52-year-old Clarissa Vaughan is planning a party for her oldest love, a poet dying of AIDS. And in Los Angeles in 1949, Laura Brown, pregnant and unsettled, does her best to prepare for her husband's birthday, but can't seem to stop reading Woolf. These women's lives are linked both by the 1925 novel and by the few precious moments of possibility each keeps returning to. Clarissa is to eventually realize:
There's just this for consolation: an hour here or there when our lives seem, against all odds and expectations, to burst open and give us everything we've ever imagined.... Still, we cherish the city, the morning; we hope, more than anything, for more.
As Cunningham moves between the three women, his transitions are seamless. One early chapter ends with Woolf picking up her pen and composing her first sentence, "Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself." The next begins with Laura rejoicing over that line and the fictional universe she is about to enter. Clarissa's day, on the other hand, is a mirror of Mrs. Dalloway's--with, however, an appropriate degree of modern beveling as Cunningham updates and elaborates his source of inspiration. Clarissa knows that her desire to give her friend the perfect party may seem trivial to many. Yet it seems better to her than shutting down in the face of disaster and despair. Like its literary inspiration, The Hours is a hymn to consciousness and the beauties and losses it perceives. It is also a reminder that, as Cunningham again and again makes us realize, art belongs to far more than just "the world of objects." --Kerry Fried

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VWW- Virginia Woolf Web

Dedicated to all the anons and all the Woolfians...

Site includes links and online texts.

  

Virginia Woolf Webring

The Virginia Woolf Webring is a ring of sites dedicated to Virginia Woolf or which have Virginia Woolf related content.

 

The Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain

After a shamefully long period of time, the country of her birth at last has a literary society devoted to its greatest writer of the twentieth century. We now realise that when we formed the Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain in August 1998 our expectations were extremely modest. We hoped for 200 members in the first twelve months but anticipated a 'more realistic' figure of around 150. As I write in late July 1999, we have over 400 members from Britain, Europe and around the world. We take this as confirmation of Woolf's literary stature...

 

The International Virginia Woolf Society

The International Virginia Woolf Society exists for the benefit of readers and scholars of Virginia Woolf throughout the world. It is also an allied organization of the Modern Language Association of America.

A principal activity of the International Virginia Woolf Society is the organization of two sessions at the annual MLA Convention and the hosting of an informal social gathering in conjunction with each MLA. Estimated attendance figures are given in the log of MLA sessions, but the expected audience for each session is from 100 to 150 people. Venue for the social gathering varies, depending on the city. In Toronto (1993 and 1997), receptions and special exhibitions were hosted by the Society jointly with the E.J.Pratt Library, Victoria University, University of Toronto. In San Diego (1994) and in Washington (1996), informal gatherings took place in the homes of Society members; in 1995, the Society organized a dinner at a Greek restaurant near the Convention Site...

 

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