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‘A Room of One's Own’ is a famous essay based on lectures Woolf gave at Newnham College and Girton College – two women's colleges at Cambridge University – in October 1928. In it, she addresses all women engaged in literature and recalls her great predecessors – Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot – who were forced to write in the common living room, hide their manuscripts from prying eyes, and constantly face the opinion that writing is an unworthy occupation for a woman. Despite its journalistic format, the essay retains the beauty and precision of language characteristic of Virginia Woolf's work, and is full of subtle humor and self-irony.
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‘A Room of One's Own’ is a famous essay based on lectures Woolf gave at Newnham College and Girton College – two women's colleges at Cambridge University – in October 1928. In it, she addresses all women engaged in literature and recalls her great predecessors – Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot – who were forced to write in the common living room, hide their manuscripts from prying eyes, and constantly face the opinion that writing is an unworthy occupation for a woman. Despite its journalistic format, the essay retains the beauty and precision of language characteristic of Virginia Woolf's work, and is full of subtle humor and self-irony.
1 Item
Data sheet
Author
Woolf Virginia
Publisher
AST
ISBN
9785171173487
Format
Paperback
Year Published
2025
Pages
224
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‘A Room of One's Own’ is a famous essay based on lectures Woolf gave at Newnham College and Girton College – two women's colleges at Cambridge University – in October 1928. In it, she addresses all women engaged in literature and recalls her great predecessors – Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot – who were forced to write in the common living room, hide their manuscripts from prying eyes, and constantly face the opinion that writing is an unworthy occupation for a woman. Despite its journalistic format, the essay retains the beauty and precision of language characteristic of Virginia Woolf's work, and is full of subtle humor and self-irony.