Referat Virginia Woolf-biogr
Mai jos puteti citi fragmente din
Referat Virginia Woolf-biogr si de asemenea puteti face
Download Referat Virginia Woolf-biogrCiteste fragmente din Referat Virginia Woolf-biogr
BIOGR. PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="
INCLUDEPICTURE d z "/images/qh.gif"
Virginia Woolf once observed, "to have so many selves." In her novels
and essays, not to mention nearly 4,000 letters and a 30-volume diary,
Woolf left behind her a voluminous anatomy of self, and in the years
since her 1941 suicide, biographers and critics have created a
succession of further portraits.
Biographies are fictions we contrive about lives we find meaningful.
Facts are interpretable, and become available to the biographer with a
certain randomness: the significance of unknown facts can scarcely
be determined.
To literary formalists, she was a groundbreaking stylist, a courageous
experimenter who, along with James Joyce, fractured and remade the
novel. To feminists, she was an early advocate of women s rights, a
writer concerned with both the social and emotional consequences of
patriarchal politics. Quentin Bell s 1972 biography of his aunt focused
on her life rather than her art, leaving us with a picture of a
high-strung, unstable woman, irreparably damaged by her childhood and
dependent in later life on the ministrations of her devoted husband,
Leonard. Phyllis Rose s "Woman of Letters" (1978) provided a feminist
reading of the transactions between her fiction and her life, while
Lyndall Gordon s "Virginia Woolf: A Writer s Life" (1984) attempted to
use Woolf s own narrative techniques by focusing on a series of
epiphanic moments that supposedly shaped Woolf s sensibility and art.
James King s biography, which draws heavily on Woolf s diaries and
letters, takes an altogether more comprehensive approach, providing the
reader with more than anyone could want to know about the writer s daily
ups and downs, travels and flirtations.
Virginia Woolf had very mixed feelings about biography, or
life-writing, as she called it. On the one hand she was an
enthusiast: As everybody knows, she wrote in her essay on Christina
Rossetti, the fascination of reading biographies is irresistible.
But, she also declared biography to be a bastard, an impure art and
claimed that the very idea was poppycock.
(Mr. King -- a professor of English at McMaster University in Hamilton,
Ontario, and the author of earlier biographies of William Cowper, Paul
Nash and William Blake -- tells us about Woolf s menstrual problems, her
attacks of diarrhea, her difficulties in buying clothes. He tells us
about her sexual frigidity and her fears about being thought cold and
detached. He dwells at considerable length on Woolf s lengthy flirtation
with Clive Bell, her sister Vanessa s husband, and also speculates that
Woolf might have had an incestuous relationship with Vanessa. That
suggestion, at least based on the evidence presented in these pages,
seems highly suspect. As Mr. King himself points out, Woolf always shied
away from the sexual side of relationships. And while Vanessa notes in a
letter that Virginia was "pining for a real petting" and refers to her
as an "ape" who might make "a pleasant enough bed fellow," similar
animal imagery and language often recur in the sisters and their
friends correspondence without a specifically sexual context.
For that matter, a schematic Freudianism informs this entire biography.
As Mr. King sees it, the young Woolf longed for more attention from her
beloved mother, who died when Virginia was 13, and as a result,
experienced attraction to other women, like Vita Sackville-West, whom
she regarded as a kind of substitute mother. Her feelings toward her
father, Mr. King argues, were more ambivalent: on one hand, she wanted
to emulate his literary career; on the other, she was determined to
rebel against both his old-fashioned esthetics and his patriarchal view
of the world. The sexual molestation Woolf suffered as a young girl at
the hands of her half-brother, George Duckworth, says Mr. King, left her
with a lasting mistrust of men, while the early deaths of her
half-sister, Stella, and her older brother, Thoby, left her obsessed
with death.
On the matter of Woolf s own suicide, which occurred against the
threatening backdrop of World War II, Mr. King offers a few theories,
some more convincing than others. He suggests that she was depressed by
the ascent of Hitler, which meant, in his words, "that phallic man had
triumphed." He suggests she was convinced that her last book, "Between
the Acts," was a failure. And he suggests she felt "deeply alienated"
from Leonard, Vanessa and Vita (even though the last decade with Leonard
had been happier, on the whole, than ever; even though her relationship
with Vanessa routinely fluctuated; even though the affair with Vita had
long since wound down).
In Mr. King s view: "She carefully chose the time and circumstances of
her death, very much in the manner of an artist imposing her will upon
life. Her decision was deeply courageous: although she would not be able
to write about death, she would actually face the experience itself."
Mr. King s readings of Woolf s novels are colored by his determination
to show how her work reflects "the search for a distinctly feminine
esthetic, one in which the intuitive parts of the self are dominant." It
is an approach that not only tends to apply retroactively the dogmatic
statements she made about men and women in the latter part of her life
to earlier works of art, but that also has the effect of ghettoizing her
overall achievement and reducing her stature as a modernist master to
that of a women s writer.
(A remarcable work is “Virginia Woolf :A writer’s Lifeâ€Â. As
Lyndall Gordon well knows, no writer s life has been so fully documented
as Virginia Woolf s. Woolf left 4,000 letters and 30 volumes of a diary,
yet the woman writing remains elusive. Between those who have
already had too much of Woolf (they rarely complain of having too much
of Joyce, Yeats or T. S. Eliot) and those who recognize that she created
her own life like a novel and that we shall not soon be done with
interpreting it, there yawns an abyss.
A South African by birth with a doctorate from Columbia University who
teaches at Oxford, Mrs. Gordon has given us a writer s life that is
measured, and brave in its imaginative interpretations.
Mrs. Gordon notes that it is not external, recorded events that mark the
significant moments in a writer s life, but rather what she calls
turning points, internal illuminations. She identifies these turning
points in Woolf s life. They were: 1892 when a ten-year old child
spied the monumental characters of her parents; 1897 (two years after
their mother s death) when the sisters learnt to walk alone; 1905 when
the young woman tramped out the unorthodox form of her novels; 1907-8
when she discovered the uses of memory; 1912-15 when she set up her
private life against all marital and mental odds; the fertile spring of
1925 (when she was planning To the Lighthouse ); the fin of 1926;
and the soul s change of 1932.
The fin of 1926, what Woolf called my vision of a fin rising on a
wide blank sea, marked her new conception of fiction. As she herself
wrote of this vision: No biographer could possibly guess this
important fact about my life in the late summer of 1926; yet biographers
pretend they know people. Her soul s change of 1932 was her
decision to write with a public rather than a private voice. At the age
of 50 she had become a feminist, a reformer and a questioner of the
abuses of power. As Mrs. Gordon demonstrates, Woolf wished to expose a
woman s point of view and called the autumn of 1932 a great season of
liberation. She had ceased to dread male condemnation.
Mrs. Gordon identifies as the three most significant elements in Woolf s
life her marriage to Leonard, her devotion to the dead ( ghostly voices
. . . more real for her than were the people who lived by her side )
and her move away from the self-conscious superiority of modern
writers towards the lives of the obscure, particularly the lives of
women. Mrs. Gordon s thesis that the dead claimed Woolf more than the
living, that she may even have died to join them, necessitates her
finding all of Woolf s work essentially autobiographical - the
recapturing of youthful ghosts.
Mrs. Gordon understands that Woolf was, like all women, trained to
silence, that the unlovable woman was always the woman who used words
to effect. She was caricatured as a tattle, a scold, a shrew, a witch.
Women felt the pressure to relinquish language, and nice women were
quiet. Mrs. Ramsay smiles at her husband silently. Finally, Mrs.
Gordon refuses to use absurd simplifications like madness,
sanity, and frigidity. As she wrote in an essay on Woolf and T.
S. Eliot, the greater the woman, the less possible it is to slot her
feelings, thoughts and relationships into fixed categories.
Probably Mrs. Gordon s comparison between Woolf and Eliot, about whom
she has written the brilliant Eliot s Early Years, has led her into
a certain conservatism that renders this book mildly idiosyncratic. She
may well be correct in seeing Woolf s marriage as central to her life.
There has been a recent tendency in Woolf studies to bury or condemn
Leonard rather than to praise him. Yet if the Woolfs marriage was
necessary to her survival, this was not, as Mrs. Gordon would have it,
because it was in any sense conventional. It did not begin in romance,
was not celebrated by ceremony or reception and would not, in its
personal details, have suited the marital ideals of T. S. Eliot or the
Archbishop of Canterbury. A rare marriage, it allowed two unusual people
to lead, with the fewest impediments and the largest opportunities,
their chosen lives. It is a remarkable fact how few women in lasting
marriages have recorded anything about them. The role of the nurturing
husband has been one of the better-kept secrets. There is surely no
female experience of which so little truth has been told as that of a
woman in an equal marriage.
Mrs. Gordon s emphasis on the centrality of Woolf s marriage is
important, therefore, but does raise problems. She simultaneously admits
that Woolf wrote little about Leonard Woolf ( If I dared I would
investigate my own sensations with regard to him, but out of . . .
Idon t know what reticence - refrain. I who am not reticent ) and yet,
despite her admission that the diary almost never explores Woolf s
attitude to her husband, Mrs. Gordon claims to understand the marriage s
success. She doubts the view, now generally accepted, that there was no
sex in the marriage - this is a daring guess. Mrs. Gordon adds that in
the marital exchanges of Leonard and Virginia there is not one note of
tepid compromise. But a marriage without the occasional tepid
compromise would be shattered in a year.
Lyndall Gordon has given us in this work what is essential to the
biography of any writer: an analysis of those experiences about which
they were silent. We come away with the sense that, muted by centuries
of training, women writers especially have found that when they
attempted truthfully to record their own lives, language failed.
(Hermione Lee, a professor of English literature at Liverpool
University and the author of a biography of Willa Cather, notes,
Virginia Woolf s status has grown beyond anything that even she, with
her strong sense of her own achievements, might have imagined. The
greater a writer s status, the more likely he or she will be
appropriated by others: given the sheer volume of material that s been
produced about Woolf -- all those books, articles and scholarly papers,
not to mention memoirs, letters, diaries and psychoanalytic readings --
is there anything vital left to say? This question is raised by Hermione
Lee ( periodic attacks of archive-faintness overcame me ) and must
inevitably occur to even the most ardent of Bloomsbury/Woolf fans when
faced with this rather hefty volume. One hesitates to commit oneself,
wondering whether the time put in will have been worth it at the end, a
bit ashamed of this cost-accounting approach but wary nonetheless.
Ms. Lee documents the evolving perception of her subject from the
delicate lady authoress of a few experimental novels and sketches, some
essays and a writer s diary, to one of the most professional,
perfectionist, energetic, courageous and committed writers in the
language. She does this without recourse to the politicized agendas of
the academy or special pleading (all of Woolf s flaws are on display
here); this account sets itself above the fray, the better to home in on
the glittery and elusive creature at its center -- the prize catch in
what one critic has described as the Bloomsbury pond.
From its very first page Ms. Lee s book is informed by current thinking
on how to approach the writing of someone s life: There is no such
thing as an objective biography, particularly not in this case.
Positions have been taken, myths have been made. But it is also
infused with a very personal passion for her subject, which enables the
author to cut crisply through the labyrinth of theories that have sprung
up: there is no way of knowing, she asserts, whether the teen-age
Virginia Stephen was really violated, forced to have oral sex -- or,
indeed, any kind of sex. What we get instead of reductionist speculation
-- Virginia Woolf as incest survivor or proto-feminist or trailblazing
post-modernist -- is a vivid picture of an age in flux and the
pressures, internal as well as external, that it brought to bear upon
one particularly sensitive female. When she and her half sister, Stella,
took a walk in Kensington Gardens they sometimes bumped into Henry
James. As late as 1904, when a 22-year-old Virginia was living with her
three siblings in what her parents generation regarded as a bohemian,
if not declasse, setup at 46 Gordon Square in Bloomsbury ( Henry James
was particularly aghast ), bathroom references were still cause for
embarrassment. In 1917, observing the freedom in matters of attire and
sexual preference enjoyed by her new women friends, like Katherine
Mansfield and Dora Carrington, she could note, It seems to me quite
impossible to wear trousers. In 1927 a cheroot-smoking Virginia Woolf
would shingle her hair, and in the summer of 1934 she switched from an
old-fashioned nib to a fountain pen. In 1939, light-years away from her
cloistered beginnings, she met Freud, who presented her with a
narcissus.
This biographer also makes judicious use of psychological conjecture; by
keeping a careful distance from jargon-ridden speculations ( But do we
need . . . to put Virginia Woolf on the couch and make more sense of her
than she can make of herself? ) and by maintaining a certain modesty
before the irreducible nature of her subject, Ms. Lee comes across as
immensely insightful without appearing to have all the answers at hand.
Of Woolf s parents, for instance, she remarks: They both died before
she had begun to prove herself as a writer, but it is probable that her
writer s life was driven by the desire to say look at me! to those two
exceptional and critical parents.
Ms. Lee is good also on the crucial role of Leonard -- this man who
seemed so foreign to his wife-to-be even as she is only months away
from marrying him and who eventually became her truest companion. In the
legend that has grown up around Virginia Woolf, Leonard features as a
grim head nurse of a husband, ceaselessly gauging his wife s symptoms
and doling out the amount of time she may spend chatting with visitors.
Ms. Lee does not deny this side of him, conceding that Leonard s
vigilant supervision of his wife s social life certainly turned him,
over the years, into more of a guardian than a lover, but he takes on
fuller form here than he has elsewhere, exhibiting ambitions and
judgments of his own -- not only in the arena of politics, where
Virginia favored pacifism in the face of the mounting threat from Hitler
and Leonard favored going to war, but also when it came to people and
literature. (Leonard was bored by much of Bloomsbury s partying; found
Ethel Smyth, the eccentric 72-year-old composer with whom his
48-year-old wife fell briefly in love, appalling ; and thought
Three Guineas his wife s worst book.) And although it has become de
rigueur to treat the Woolfs marriage as a sexless union of highbrows,
the one sober and the other mad, this is the first biography I have read
that succeeds, through a subtle shift in emphasis, in conveying the
profoundly intimate quality of their relationship -- the way Virginia
felt about Leonard s presence of an evening when they both read quietly,
L in his stall, I in mine. Ms. Lee subverts the established view
still further by suggesting that, at least in the beginning, as
evidenced by the playful use of pet names (Virginia was often
Mandril and Leonard Mongoose ) and general indulgence in what
Virginia called private fun, the Woolfs marriage had a cuddly, even
frisky aspect -- an erotic secret life. (Another recent biography,
Art and Affection: A Life of Virginia Woolf, by Panthea Reid, while
not nearly as strong as Ms. Lee s, makes fascinating use of documents
that are either unfamiliar or heretofore unpublished. So we fall upon a
startlingly sexy note written by Virginia to Leonard a year and a half
after their marriage, in which the Mandril wishes me to inform you
delicately that her flanks and rump are now in finest plumage, and
invites you to an exhibition. Virginia when she sizzles sounds very
hot indeed!)
Of the many original ideas that Ms. Lee takes up, the place of reading
in Virginia Woolf s life and the meaning of her madness are especially
well developed. Although Woolf s was too mocking a sensibility to give
itself over to the Pateresque view of art as a form of religion, she
clearly found solace -- a way out from her overwhelming sense of
futility, the old treadmill feeling of going on and on and on, for no
reason -- in the ordering properties of reading and writing. Reading
became for her, as Ms. Lee describes it, a means of transcending the
self. (She wrote to Ethel Smyth, Sometimes I think heaven must be
one continuous unexhausted reading. ) As for Woolf s psychological
frailty -- my own queer, difficult nervous system -- Hermione Lee
makes a persuasive case for her underlying sanity and for the literary
use to which she put the epiphanies revealed to her in her breakdowns.
Notwithstanding her blue devils, which was her term for depression,
and the agitations of her manic phases, she nurtured a hard-won
affirmative instinct. She admitted to a terror of real life and a
general thin-skinnedness -- Cut me anywhere, & I bleed too profusely
-- and by her own recognition she descended from an overbred, attenuated
race: such cold fingers, so fastidious, so critical, such taste. My
madness has saved me.
And perhaps, indeed, it did. As she aged, she seems never to have
succumbed to middle-aged prejudices; she remained porous in a way
creative people are often imagined to be but rarely are. Although it may
seem odd to say of someone who killed herself (she put a stone in a
pocket and walked into the Ouse River) that she was heroic, it is all
the same the word that one most associates with Virginia Woolf after
reading Ms. Lee s biography. She ceaselessly challenged herself in her
art, always giving this loose, drifting material of life her best
imaginative capacities. Her courage in questioning the manifold smug
assumptions of the patriarchal culture in which she lived -- ranging
from its educational system (she felt a particular disdain for masculine
vanity as personified by Oxbridge dons and turned down several honorary
degrees) to the way it waged war -- is easy to overlook because of the
subtlety and whimsy of her methods. But it is all the more striking when
one considers that she might have comfortably inhabited the privileged
niche she had within that culture (T. S. Eliot called it a kind of
hereditary position in English letters ) without rocking the boat.
(The danger in analyzing lives and literature according to selective
evidence or a single set of experiences is that the essential spirit of
people and their creative products can suffer severe misinterpretation
if tucked neatly into Procrustean beds. Such a reductionist reading is
at the heart of Louise DeSalvo s thesis in Virginia Woolf: The Impact
of Childhood Sexual Abuse on Her Life and Work. She claims that
Woolf s recurrent depressions, breakdowns, and eventual suicide were
caused by physical abuses, especially by Woolf s half brothers, and the
probable psychic trauma that was triggered by the dysfunctional behavior
of almost all Woolf s immediate family; these experiences also provided
the central theme for her novels and nonfiction. Although Ms. DeSalvo,
who teaches English at Hunter College, presents a thoughtful theory
based upon close readings and exhaustive research, speculation about the
psyches of the dead can be dangerous. For beyond the fact that,
according to Ms. DeSalvo, Woolf and her sister, Vanessa Bell, endured
what most analysts would assume to be the damaging effects of Victorian
upbringings complete with a raging father, a distant mother and a half
sister banished to an institution, assumption can never be proof. The
supporting evidence Ms. DeSalvo finds in Woolf s writings for her
evolving state of mind deserves consideration. But defining a major
author and her work according to current theories on child abuse and
feminist psychology alone ignores the miracle of transcendence in life
and in art and dismisses the truth that the whole is greater than the
sum of its parts.
ì¥Â