Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Qui a mangé Virginia Woolf?
Related Results
Uniforms and Uniformity: Virginia Woolf
Uniforms and Uniformity: Virginia Woolf
In foregrounding fashion’s involvement with nationalist and corporatist political movements, this chapter on Virginia Woolf focuses on her 1930s writing—especially The Years (1937)...
Woolf’s Floating Monkeys and Whirling Women
Woolf’s Floating Monkeys and Whirling Women
This chapter considers two of Virginia Woolf’s most experimental texts, her Nurse Lugton story for children and her novel The Waves. The first catalogues an awareness of the way th...
The colonial period of U.S. history. "The Golden Age of Virginia" (1680-1776)
The colonial period of U.S. history. "The Golden Age of Virginia" (1680-1776)
The monograph presents the most interesting events, trends in the social development of Virginia mainly of the XVIII century, the brightest period in the early history of America. ...
The Obligation to Choose
The Obligation to Choose
Chapter 1 explores Woolf’s writings up to the end of 1925 in relation to scientific ideas on wave-particle duality, providing the ‘retrospect of Woolf’s earlier novels’ which Micha...
Modernist Physics
Modernist Physics
Modernist Physics takes as its focus the ideas associated with three scientific papers published by Albert Einstein in 1905, considering the dissemination of those ideas both withi...
‘Orlando the Man and Orlando the Woman’
‘Orlando the Man and Orlando the Woman’
Chapter 2 looks at Woolf’s writings from 1926 onwards in relation to both Louis de Broglie’s work on the wave-particle duality of radiation and matter and, more significantly, Niel...
The Ethics of Immediacy
The Ethics of Immediacy
Drawing connections between Freudian psychoanalysis, Virginia Woolf’s criticism and fiction, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology, The Ethics of Immediacy recounts the far-rea...

