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1-11 of 11 Search Results for
dalloway
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Journal Article
English Language Notes (2014) 52 (1): 133–144.
Published: 01 March 2014
... to know the "exact location o f w hat is happening" is "part o f the central experience."2 Nowadays, m apping out Mrs. Dalloway is another way o f reading it, and this literary cartographic practice has only become more popular w ith the arrival of digital technologies that make pinpointing every tw ist...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 40 (2): 57–68.
Published: 01 December 2002
...: Bloomsbury, 1996) 42, 117. MRS. DALLOWAY AND PERFORMANCE THEORY Late 20th-century performance theory contests the supposed distinction between life and theatre. Virginia Woolf posed the same challenge thro u g h o u t h er writing, m ost clearly in h er 1925 novel Mrs. Dalloway. H er interest in theatre...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 40 (2): 55–57.
Published: 01 December 2002
... (L ondon: Bloomsbury, 1996) 42, 117. MRS. DALLOWAY AND PERFORMANCE THEORY Late 20th-century performance theory contests the supposed distinction between life and theatre. Virginia Woolf posed the same challenge thro u g h o u t h er writing, m ost clearly in h er 1925 novel Mrs. Dalloway. H er...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 42 (3): 52–67.
Published: 01 March 2005
... characters of Virginia Woolf s 1925 novel, Mrs. Dalloway, is Septimus W arren Smith, a shell-shocked veteran ofWorld War I, who has recendy returned to London with his Italian wife, Lucrezia. Although critics have correctiy suggest ed that Woolf s portrayal of Septimus and his mistreatoient at the hands...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2001) 38 (4): 64–72.
Published: 01 June 2001
...-liberatory days. The rom antic friendship, an increasingly alien concept in today s world of sexual identity politics, offers great explanatory force in understanding how Waugh and other authors, including Walt W hitm an, Virginia Woolf (Mrs. Dalloway), and E. M. Forster (Maurice) , saw their protagonists...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 40 (2): 68–77.
Published: 01 December 2002
...Steven Gould Axelrod Copyright © 2002 Regents of the University of Colorado 2002 68 English Language Notes 8 M organ 269. 9Woolf, Dalloway 259. 10L ittleton 45. 11 L ittleton 45. 12 Case, Sue-Ellen Feminism and Theatre (New York: R outledge, 1988) 47. 13 Fehevary, H elen, C hrista W olf s...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 40 (1): 77–85.
Published: 01 September 2002
... and the literal breeding of the superwoman (p. 60), and a second chapter to four eugenical subtexts in Mrs. Dalloway (pp. 38-57). The twin menaces of heredity and their interrelationship, referred to above, serve as the basis for an exegesis of much of Eliot s work, including Hysteria, O de, B urbank...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 39 (3): 54–70.
Published: 01 March 2002
... celebrated, because m ost characteristic, even selfdescriptive, are vagulous (labelled nonce-wd and vagulate ( v. rare ) , quoted from h e r diary and letters, though n o t from their best-known context in Mrs. Dalloway (130). Vagulous is described March 2002 63 as a Fanciful form ation, fou n d Only...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2013) 51 (1): 35–50.
Published: 01 March 2013
... decolonization, m ulticulturalism , and global m igration.They are indebted to m odernist precursors because, like Ulysses (1922) and Mrs. Dalloway (1925), they suture narrative events to the sound and sense o f Anglophone words. A m odernist work such as Ulysses is difficult to translate, the novelist...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 42 (3): 39–52.
Published: 01 March 2005
... of Virginia Woolf s 1925 novel, Mrs. Dalloway, is Septimus W arren Smith, a shell-shocked veteran ofWorld War I, who has recendy returned to London with his Italian wife, Lucrezia. Although critics have correctiy suggest ed that Woolf s portrayal of Septimus and his mistreatoient at the hands of Dr. Holmes...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2022) 60 (2): 69–91.
Published: 01 October 2022
... and the United States at that time ( “Crip/Queer Aesthetics,” 66 ). Franks contrasts such homosocial images of militaristic perfection to two very different interrogations of the shell-shocked, queered soldier in Rebecca West’s The Return of the Soldier and Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway , tracing their rejections...
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