Chapter

Woolf and Russian Literature

Authors:
To read the full-text of this research, you can request a copy directly from the author.

Abstract

As a paradigmatic modernist author, Virginia Woolf is celebrated for the ways her fiction illuminates modern and contemporary life. Woolf scholars have long debated how context - whether historical, cultural, or theoretical - is to be understood in relation to her work and how her work produces new insights into context. Drawing on an international field of leading and emergent specialists, this collection provides an authoritative resource for contemporary Woolf scholarship that explores the distinct and overlapping dimensions of her writings. Rather than survey existing scholarship, these essays extend Woolf studies in new directions by examining how the author is contextualised today. The collection also highlights connections between Woolf and key cultural, political and historical issues of the twentieth century such as avant-gardism in music and art, developments in journalism and the publishing industry, political struggles over race, gender and class and the bearings of colonialism, empire and war.

No full-text available

Request Full-text Paper PDF

To read the full-text of this research,
you can request a copy directly from the author.

Article
From the Society's first Charter in 1662 to Peter the Great's productive visit to England during 1698, and from the founding of St Petersburg in 1703, three centuries ago, until the city became the official capital in 1712, the Society's contacts with Russia developed in many different ways.
The Meaning of Russian Literature
  • Wright
Leo Tolstoy’s Translator Aylmer Maude
  • Protopopova