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Mrs. Dalloway
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Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2012) 58 (2): 187–212.
Published: 01 June 2012
...Vicki Tromanhauser Copyright © Hofstra University 2012 Mrs. Dalloway’s Animals and the Humanist Laboratory
Mrs. Dalloway’s Animals
and the Humanist Laboratory
Vicki Tromanhauser
Mrs. Dalloway’s sustained critique of the structures of hierarchy and
dominance that underpin...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (1): 49–74.
Published: 01 March 2017
...Irene Yoon This essay demonstrates how Virginia Woolf negotiates problems of temporal, spatial, and intersubjective distance through the modern—and increasingly transparent—landscape of interwar London. Through readings of “A Sketch of the Past” and Mrs. Dalloway , I argue that the perceptual...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2012) 58 (3): 515–523.
Published: 01 September 2012
... in tandem—
but nonetheless she cannily identifies and fills a gap in the scholarship.
516
Review
Chapter one argues for the modernity of Woolf’s 1930 essay “Street
Haunting” and establishes Saloman’s against-the-grain strategy in its
treatment of Mrs Dalloway. The essay’s narrator leaves her...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2012) 58 (2): ix–x.
Published: 01 June 2012
...Michael Ryan Copyright © Hofstra University 2012 Twentieth-Century Literature’s
Andrew J. Kappel Prize in Literary Criticism, 2012
The winner of this year’s prize is Vicki Tromanhauser’s “Mrs. Dalloway’s
Animals and the Humanist Laboratory.” The judge is Michael Ryan, pro-
fessor...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2020) 66 (4): 513–519.
Published: 01 December 2020
... offers graceful readings of pandemic traces in three canonical modernist works: Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925), T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (1922), and W. B. Yeats’s “The Second Coming” (1919). In true modernist style, her readings make new again Woolf’s narrative texture, Eliot’s fragments...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2013) 59 (2): 360–368.
Published: 01 June 2013
... literary
productions, which lack the self-conscious defenses of formalism that can
be found in a Roger Fry or a Clive Bell. Bloomsburian fictions from E.
M. Forster’s Howards End to Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway turn inward
to intimate, domestic settings that seem to elude public classification...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2020) 66 (4): 463–484.
Published: 01 December 2020
... technology Big Ben’s intrusive chimes narrate the passing day of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925), but readers will more likely recall the distinctive metaphor that Woolf repeats three times for this dissipating sound: “the leaden circles dissolved in the air” ( MD 4, 80, 158). In 1957, Glen...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2012) 58 (4): 720–727.
Published: 01 December 2012
...-
stand that the ordinary is no simple subject, its analysis involving far more
than noticing and providing a meaning for the abundance of everyday
detail packing, say, the pages of Ulysses or Mrs. Dalloway. First, despite
modernism’s “commitment to . . . experiences that are not heightened...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2013) 59 (2): 351–359.
Published: 01 June 2013
... in detailed ways. (A ques-
tion posed in one of her sonnets provides this review’s title.)
Fisher justifies her focus on female authors by identifying thematic
features evident in Willa Cather’s One of Ours, Mrs. Dalloway, and Kath-
erine Anne Porter’s “Pale Horse, Pale Rider.” These include a “com...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2010) 56 (4): 551–558.
Published: 01 December 2010
...” thereafter extends such inquiries
to Mrs. Dalloway, which Reichman deciphers as likewise experimenting
with expanded notions of social responsibility. Much as Clarissa Dallo-
way’s travels throughout London confront her with a series of “acciden-
tal encounters” (50), tort law newly codified...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2010) 56 (4): 437–461.
Published: 01 December 2010
... for decades, and indeed this model
of metropolitan subjectivity and international engagement is reflected in
texts like Mrs. Dalloway and Ulysses. Yet this critical framework cannot
fully account for the experiential and literary cosmopolitanism of mod-
ernists like Mary Butts, Christopher Isherwood...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2000) 46 (1): 115–124.
Published: 01 March 2000
... the Phallus: Genital Ambiguity in Mary Renault’s
Historical Novels.” 42.2 (1996): 277-93
Hoff, Molly. “The Pseudo-Homeric World of Mrs. Dalloway. ” 45.2 (1999): 186-
209
Hoffman, Michael J., and Ann ter Haar. “‘Whose Books Once Influenced Mine’:
The Relationship between E. M...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2010) 56 (1): 25–46.
Published: 01 March 2010
... the portrayal of a more or less effec-
tive work of mourning and toward a much more ambivalent, unresolved
portrait of communal loss? In “Mrs. Dalloway’s Postwar Elegy” Christine
Froula describes how Woolf’s earlier novel reinvigorates the genre of
elegy, working through communal grief toward...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2022) 68 (2): 235–240.
Published: 01 June 2022
... . 2017 . Science Fiction and the Mass Cultural Genre System . Middletown, CT : Wesleyan University Press . Showalter Elaine . 1992 . Introduction to Mrs. Dalloway, by Virginia Woolf , edited by Showalter Elaine , xi – xlviii . New York : Penguin . Wells H. G. 1908...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2015) 61 (1): 63–91.
Published: 01 March 2015
... and Neville’s monumentalizing impulses, in elegizing Percival Rhoda gives herself over to the clarity of sight that such moments provide, in what might be seen as a rewriting of Clarissa Dalloway’s similar moment at the end of Mrs. Dalloway . As her mourning leads her to describe orchestra members as taking...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2007) 53 (3): 394–405.
Published: 01 September 2007
...
Review
familiar texts (Mrs. Dalloway, Clarissa, and Lolita, among others) and add
ing a discussion o f detective fiction (making entirely clear how little her
theories depend on “high” art), Zunshine integrates the new perspective
in ways that extend and deepen our understanding o f...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2007) 53 (1): 40–66.
Published: 01 March 2007
... to do justice to the particularity of
postwar London, Mrs. Dalloway famously stages several encounters with
an apparently homeless woman who sings. In addition to transcribing
the actual text of her song (“ee um fah so / foo swee too eem oo” [80
the narrator engages in a protracted...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2018) 64 (3): 379–386.
Published: 01 September 2018
... of impressionism to register the disturbances of mental life. Similarly, Cunningham’s aestheticization of Woolf’s suicide and modernization of the story of Mrs. Dalloway are seen as lacking the very qualities that make Woolf’s writing so existentially challenging. Then Matz crafts some cognitive dissonance...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2008) 54 (3): 401–409.
Published: 01 September 2008
...
veteran Septimus Smith into a protracted elegy for military sacrifice and
for the lingering effects of “shell shock,” afflicting more than a quarter
of the soldiers who survived the unspeakable horrors of combat during
the 1914—18 war. Chapter 4, “Mrs. Dalloway’s Postwar Elegy,” originally...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2004) 50 (4): 433–435.
Published: 01 December 2004
...
ing The Voyage Out in relation to her later work, including Mrs. Dalloway
and To the Lighthouse. Briefly, he argues that after The Voyage Out, her
first novel and only colonial odyssey, Woolf “dispenses with the need to
traverse the empire and history in search of comprehensive knowledge...
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