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Title
Virgina Woolf, literary materiality and feminist aesthetics : from pen to print / Amber Jenkins.
ISBN
9783031324918 electronic book
3031324919 electronic book
9783031324901 hardcover
3031324900 hardcover
Published
Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, 2023.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource : illustrations (color).
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-031-32491-8 doi
Call Number
PR6045.O72 Z738 2023
Dewey Decimal Classification
823.912
Summary
This book interrogates the relationship between the material conditions of Woolf's writing practices and her work as a printer and publisher at the Hogarth Press. In bringing to light her embodied literary processes, from drafting and composition to hand-printing and binding, this study foregrounds the interactions between Woolf's modernist experimentation and the visual and material aspects of her printed works. By drawing on the field of print culture, as well as the materialist turn in Woolf scholarship, it explores how her experience in print, book-design and publishing underlines her experimental writing, and how her literary texts are conditioned by the context of their production. This book, therefore, provides new ways of reading Woolf's modernism in the context of twentieth-century print, material, and visual cultures. By suggesting that Woolf's work at the Hogarth Press sensitized her to the significant role the visual aspects of a text play in its system of representation, it also considers the extent to which materiality informs both her work, as well as her engagement with Bloomsbury formalist aesthetics, which often exaggerate the distinction between visual and verbal modes of expression.
Note
Includes index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 13, 2023).
Series
Material modernisms.
Part I: Materiality
1. Introduction: Writing, Materiality, and Aesthetics
2. Conversations in Colour and Ink: Feminist Aesthetics in The Mark on the Wall and Kew Gardens
3. Fill in the sketch as you like: Developing the Fragmentary Form of Jacobs Room
4. The cold raw edge of ones relinquished pages: Reading Mrs Dalloway as a Palimpsest
Part II. Aesthetics
5. Drafting Mrs Ramsay and Lily Briscoe: Feminist Aesthetics in the Manuscript of To the Lighthouse
6. A succession of semblances: Form and Feminism in The Waves
7. Getting the past to shadow this broken surface: Time, Materiality, and Aesthetics.