The Life of Virginia Woolf
“If one could be friendly with women, what a pleasure-- the relationship so secret and private compared with relations with men. why not write about it truthfully?” In order to learn about the life of Virginia Woolf a british feminist writer, one must understand her history,talent,writings and suicide. She was most known for her feminist writings. During the interwar period she was a figure in the London literary society she was also a member of the Bloomsbury Group. The Bloomsbury group involved english writers such as intellectuals, philosophers, and artist.
Adeline Virginia Woolf was born on January 25, 1882 in London, England. Both of Woolf’s parents were widowed. Virginia’s mother had three kids
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In the Bloomsbury group she met Leonard Woolf, in despite his poverty they married in 1912. they were known to be happily married, and also worked together professionally, with founding of Hogarth Press. Hogarth published Woolf’s works and also T.S. Eliot. The Bloomsbury group had a very open mind. She started a relationship with Vita Sackville-West the wife of the writer Harold Nicolson. She wrote Orlando, a love letter, for Vita. they both remained good friends. Woolf started her literary career in 1910 she was working for the Times Literary Supplement and she had released her first novel, “The Voyage Out”, in 1915. In 1925 she released “Mrs Dalloway” a story of Clarissa Dalloway, a woman preparing a party that she would host. The style is compared to James Joyce’s Ulysses, virginia denied that Connection. The novel works with themes of mental illness. The survivor came back from the war who suffers as doctors dismiss his condition, and who commits suicide. In 1927 Woolf published To the Lighthouse. It explores the the everyday life during the war and also the unfairness of relationship between men and women. She mainly wrote about same sex love, war,suicide and feminism. Eileen Barrett and Patricia Cramer have made studies on virginia woolf and she focused a lot on feminist and lesbian themes on her work. In 1928 Virginia Woolf published Orlando,