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  1. www.virginiawoolfsociety.org.uk › resources › virginia-woolfVirginia Woolf: A Short Biography

    Adeline Virginia Stephen was born on 25 January 1882 in London. Her father, Leslie Stephen (1832–1904), was a man of letters (and first editor of the Dictionary of National Biography) who came from a family distinguished for public service (part of the ‘intellectual aristocracy’ of Victorian England). Her mother, Julia (1846–95), from ...

  2. Panthea Reid. Virginia Woolf - Modernist Writer, Feminist, Novelist: Woolf’s experiments with point of view confirm that, as Bernard thinks in The Waves, “we are not single.”. Being neither single nor fixed, perception in her novels is fluid, as is the world she presents. While Joyce and Faulkner separate one character’s interior ...

  3. Virginia Woolf Was More Than Just a Women’s Writer. She was a great observer of everyday life. Danny Heitman. HUMANITIES, May/June 2015, Volume 36, Number 3. Photo caption. Virginia Woolf, that great lover of language, would surely be amused to know that, some seven decades after her death, she endures most vividly in popular culture as a pun ...

  4. Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) was an English novelist, essayist, biographer, and feminist. Woolf was a prolific writer, whose modernist style changed with each new novel. [1] Her letters and memoirs reveal glimpses of Woolf at the center of English literary culture during the Bloomsbury era. Woolf represents a historical moment when art was ...

  5. Virginia Woolf. Adeline Virginia Woolf, nascida Adeline Virginia Stephen ( Kensington, 25 de janeiro de 1882 — Lewes, 28 de março de 1941 ), foi uma escritora, ensaísta e editora britânica. Estreou na literatura em 1915, com o romance The Voyage Out, que abriu o caminho para a sua carreira como escritora e uma série de obras notáveis.

  6. Virginia Woolf. Virginia Woolf (née Stephen) (January 25, 1882 – March 28, 1941) was a British author who is considered to be one of the foremost figures of both Modernism and feminism in the twentieth century. Woolf is considered one of the most psychological of all the Modernists; many of her later novels take place entirely within her ...

  7. Virginia Woolf - Modernist, Feminist, Novelist: At the beginning of 1924, the Woolfs moved their city residence from the suburbs back to Bloomsbury, where they were less isolated from London society. Soon the aristocratic Vita Sackville-West began to court Virginia, a relationship that would blossom into a lesbian affair. Having already written a story about a Mrs. Dalloway, Woolf thought of a ...