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2017 | 45 | 7 | 283-301

Article title

Moments of liberty. (Self-)censorship Games in the Essays of Virginia Woolf

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
What is surprising in Virginia Woolf’s essays is the scale and the audacity of her intellectual searches – in the time of increased repressive censorship and growing totalitarianisms, she approached the themes of freedom which have remained controversial ever since. The article presents the essayistic nature as a strategy applied by Woolf in her personal essays to avoid censorship, and intentionally expand the limits of freedoms important to her. The author offers an outline of the mechanism of repressive censorship and the chilling effect it worked in the interwar United Kingdom based on the examples of suspensions of outstanding modernist works and show-trials of writers. She presents three areas of study of freedom in Woolf’s essays: women’s emancipation, tolerance towards non-heteronormative persons, and pacifism, as well as the areas of private and public (self-)censorship which existed therein.

Year

Volume

45

Issue

7

Pages

283-301

Physical description

Dates

published
2018-05-14

Contributors

  • Institute of English Studies, Faculty of Philology, University of Wroclaw, 50-138 Wroclaw, 22 Kuźnicza street.

References

  • Bauman Zygmunt, Wolność, trans. Joanna Tokarska-Bakir, Znak, Krakow, Fundacja im. Stefana Batorego, Warsaw 1995.
  • Bell Quentin, Virginia Woolf. Biografia, trans. Maja Lavergne, Wydawnictwo Książkowe Twój Styl, Warsaw 2004.
  • Bruś Teresa, “Essaying in Autobiography: Wystan Hugh Auden’s and Walter Benjamin’s Faces”, Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly, 2010, vol. 33.2, pp. 333–349.
  • Cook Philip, Heilmann Conrad, “Censorship and two types of self-censorship”, LSE Choice Group working paper series 2002, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 1–25.
  • Forster Edward Morgan, Woolf Virginia, “Letter to the Nation and Athenaeum” in: Joanne Winning, The Pilgrimage of Dorothy Richardson, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison 2000, pp. 111–112.
  • Foucault Michel, Nadzorować i karać. Narodziny więzienia, trans. Tadeusz Komendant, Wydawnictwo Fundacja Aletheia, Warsaw 1998.
  • Green Jonathon, Karolides Nicholas James, Encyclopedia of Censorship, Facts On File, New York 2005.
  • Harris Wendell V., “Reflections on the Peculiar Status of the Personal Essay”, College English 1996, vol. 58, no. 8, pp. 934–953.
  • Humm Maggie, “Memory, Photography, and Modernism: The ‘dead bodies and ruined houses’ of Virginia Woolf’s Three Guineas”, Signs 2003, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 645–663.
  • Jones Danell, “The Dreadnought Hoax And The Theatres Of War”, Literature & History 2013, issue 22.1, pp. 80–94.
  • Kennard Jean E., “Power and Sexual Ambiguity: The Dreadnought Hoax, The Voyage Out, Mrs Dalloway and Orlando”, Journal of Modern Literature 1996, issue 20.2, pp. 149–164.
  • Krzywicka Irena, Wstęp, in: Radclyffe Hall, Źródło samotności, Towarzystwo Wydawnicze Rój, Warsaw 1933, pp. V–XI.
  • Lee Hermione, Virginia Woolf, Random House, New York 1999. Lessing Doris, Wstęp, in: Virignia Woolf, Siedem szkiców, David Bradshaw (ed.), trans. Maja Lavergne, Wydawnictwo Prószyński i S-ka, Warsaw 2009, pp. 7–14.
  • Marshik Celia, British Modernism and Censorship, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2006.
  • Mullin Katherine, James Joyce, Sexuality and Social Purity, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2003.
  • Phillips Kathy J., Virginia Woolf Against Empire, University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville 1994.
  • Sendyka Roma, Nowoczesny esej: studium historycznej świadomości gatunku, Towarzystwo Autorów i Wydawców Prac Naukowych Universitas, Krakow 2006.
  • Sławiński Janusz, “Ośmiotekst eseistyczny” in: idem, Teksty i teksty, Towarzystwo Autorów i Wydawców Prac Naukowych Universitas, Krakow 2000, pp. 252–258.
  • Squier Susan Merrill, “Invisible Assistants or Lab Partners? Female Modernism and the Culture(s) of Modern Science”, in: Rereading Modernism: New Directions in Feminist Criticism, Lisa Rado (ed.), Garland Press, New York 1994, pp. 299–320.
  • Winterhalter Teresa, “‘What Else Can I Do But Write?’ Discursive Disruption and the Ethics of Style in Virginia Woolf’s Three Guineas”, Hypatia 2003, vol. 18, issue 4, pp. 236–257.
  • Woolf Virginia, A Room of One’s Own & The Voyage Out, Wordsworth Classics, Ware 2012.
  • Woolf Virginia, A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas, introduction Hermione Lee, Vintage Random House, London 2001.
  • Woolf Virginia, Collected Essays, Leonard Woolf (ed.), Hogarth Press, London 1967, vol. 1–4.
  • Woolf Virginia, Eseje wybrane, trans. M. Heydel, selection and editing Magda Heydel, Roma Sendyka, Wydawnictwo Karakter, Krakow 2015.
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  • Woolf Virginia, Trzy gwinee, trans. Ewa Krasińska, Wydawnictwo Sic!, Warsaw 2002.
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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-doi-10_18778_1505-9057_45_15
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