메뉴 건너뛰기
.. 내서재 .. 알림
소속 기관/학교 인증
인증하면 논문, 학술자료 등을  무료로 열람할 수 있어요.
한국대학교, 누리자동차, 시립도서관 등 나의 기관을 확인해보세요
(국내 대학 90% 이상 구독 중)
로그인 회원가입 고객센터 ENG
주제분류

추천
검색

논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
한국제임스조이스학회 제임스조이스 저널 제임스조이스 저널 제21권 제1호
발행연도
2015.1
수록면
111 - 134 (24page)

이용수

표지
📌
연구주제
📖
연구배경
🔬
연구방법
🏆
연구결과
AI에게 요청하기
추천
검색

초록· 키워드

오류제보하기
While Virginia Woolf’s reputation as one of the most prominent modernist and feminist writers is firmly established by her experimental novels, her tremendous contribution to essay writing has been overlooked until recently. It is surprising that Woolf’s essays have received little critical attention considering that she was primarily an essayist and reviewer for the first two decades of her professional life and continued to write reviews in almost forty years as a literary journalist. The most remarkable aspect of her neglected essays is that many reveal her enthusiastic engagement with biographical writing. In these essays, Woolf notes that the biographer’s art has entered a new phase to capture the essence of a personality as modern novels do. This paper examines several essays on biographical writing, “The New Biography,” “The Art of Biography,” “The Lives of the Obscure,” “Shelley and Elizabeth Hitchener,” and “Eliza and Sterne,” to explore the ways in which Woolf advocates a new biography by criticizing her predecessors and evolving her own modern aesthetic position. These essays show that Woolf’s experiments with biographical writing illustrate her attitudes toward life and writing and demonstrate her concerns about women and history, which, in turn, establish her as an uncompromising feminist and great modernist.

목차

등록된 정보가 없습니다.

참고문헌 (23)

참고문헌 신청

함께 읽어보면 좋을 논문

논문 유사도에 따라 DBpia 가 추천하는 논문입니다. 함께 보면 좋을 연관 논문을 확인해보세요!

이 논문의 저자 정보

최근 본 자료

전체보기

댓글(0)

0