In a book that compares Virginia Woolf's writing with that of the novelist, actress, and feminist activist Elizabeth Robins (1862-1952), Molly Hite explores the fascinating connections between Woolf's aversion to women's "pleading a cause" in fiction and her narrative technique of complicating, minimizing, or omitting tonal cues. Hite shows how A Room of One's Own, Mrs. Dalloway, and The Voyage Out borrow from and implicitly criticize Robins's work.

Hite presents and develops the concept of narrative tone as a means to enrich and complicate our readings of Woolf's modernist novels. In Woolf's Ambiguities, she argues that the greatest formal innovation in Woolf's fiction is the muting, complicating, or effacing of textual pointers guiding how readers feel and make ethical judgments about characters and events. Much of Woolf's narrative prose, Hite proposes, thus refrains from endorsing a single position, not only adding value ambiguity to the cognitive ambiguity associated with modernist fiction generally, but explicitly rejecting the polemical intent of feminist novelists in the generation preceding her own. Hite also points out that Woolf reconsidered her rejection of polemical fiction later in her career. In the unfinished draft of her "essay-nove;" The Pargiters, Woolf created a brilliant new narrative form allowing her to make unequivocal value judgments.



Autorentext

Molly Hite is Emerita Professor of English at Cornell University. She is the author of The Other Side of the Story, also from Cornell, Ideas of Order in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon, and two novels.

Titel
Woolf's Ambiguities
Untertitel
Tonal Modernism, Narrative Strategy, Feminist Precursors
EAN
9781501714467
ISBN
978-1-5017-1446-7
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
15.12.2017
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Anzahl Seiten
244
Jahr
2017
Untertitel
Englisch