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Wild Outbursts of Freedom
Reading Virginia Woolf's Short Fiction
Wild Outbursts of Freedom
Reading Virginia Woolf's Short Fiction
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Description
A pivotal figure in the world of novelists, Virginia Woolf was an outsider as a short story writer. Her stories form a large part of her output, but they were routinely sidelined in favor of her novels, which remain her pre-eminent literary legacy. Bringing together information from unpublished sources, Skrbic provides a long-overdue examination of Woolf's experiments with the short story form. Offering a model for the analysis of Woolf's short fiction, this book gives prominence to the way in which Woolf utilizes the short story's indeterminate frame to question the form, structure, and conventionalities of fiction. Scholars, students, and fans of Woolf will profit from this careful consideration of a neglected area of Woolf scholarship.
Despite her popularity as a novelist, Woolf was among the very few writers of her generation to face the creative challenge of writing stories with no direct action, human content, or dialogue. For Woolf, writing short fiction was a displacement activity and the short story's marginal and detached framework lent an ideal shape to her thoughts. Here, Skrbic examines Woolf's commitment to and enthusiasm for exploring the genre's potential and looks at how her stories intersect with biography, ghost stories, and the short story cycle. Wild Outbursts of Freedom offers readers a unique opportunity to expand their understanding of Woolf and her work.
Table of Contents
"I am one person--myself": Virginia Woolf's Practitioner Criticism
Darkness and Conjecture: The Life of Monday or Tuesday
Reflecting What Passes: Catching Mrs. Brown
But Which Is the True Story?: The Unpublished Juvenilia and Early Short Fiction
Phantom Phrases: Ghostly Motifs in the Short Fiction
A Tolerable Shape: Mrs. Dalloway's Party and the Short Story Cycle
Conclusion: Short Releases (1930-1941)
Bibliography
Product details
Published | 30 May 2004 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 216 |
ISBN | 9780313323768 |
Imprint | Praeger |
Dimensions | 235 x 156 mm |
Series | Contributions to the Study of World Literature |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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