sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
soph ([personal profile] sophia_sol) wrote2023-01-05 02:19 pm

A Room of One's Own, by Virginia Woolf

I've seen this recommended many times, and this is the year! I was expecting A Room of One's Own to be a straightforward book-length essay arguing about the ways a culture of misogyny has gotten in the way of women's writing and the things women need to be successful writers, but it's got a much more interesting structure and approach than that. Woolf uses the conceit of telling the story of a particular (fictional) day in the life of a woman and the things she experienced and thought about over the course of that day, in order to both straightforwardly argue points like I expected but also to just, like, put forward the realities of women's experiences for the reader to ponder upon and draw their own conclusions.

It's fascinating, it's compellingly written, it's extremely more-ish. It's full of both things where I'm like "YEAH YOU'RE SO RIGHT, BRING IT" and things where I desperately want to argue with Woolf, but like, argue (affectionate). And I'm pretty confident that's what she was going for, tbh!! An invigorating read, and now I want to read more things by Woolf.
lirazel: Jane Eyre and Rochester from the 2006 version of Jane Eyre ([tv] in danger of loving you too well)

[personal profile] lirazel 2023-01-06 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I totally get that. I have this biography of Buster Keaton that I really want to read but I keep getting intimidated by its length!

Oh, another recommendation: she wrote a short and charming "autobiography" of Flush, Elizabeth Barret Browning's dog.
lirazel: Dreamcatcher in the Fly High mv ([music] colored with the seven lights)

[personal profile] lirazel 2023-01-06 10:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Hahaha omg it isn't mine either! (Though I can't think of a single other example that I've heard of. Is this a real genre? I thought VW made it up!) But the narrative voice is just such fun that I enjoy it a lot.
lirazel: Marlene Dietrich in drag ([film] dietrich)

[personal profile] lirazel 2023-01-09 01:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Wild! I had no idea! (Though I absolutely adore the title "For He Can Creep"---loooove a Christopher Smart reference!)