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         Woolf Virginia:     more books (100)
  1. The Diary of Virginia Woolf, Vol. 2: 1920-1924 by Virginia Woolf, 1980-09-17
  2. The Diary of Virginia Woolf, Vol. 1: 1915-1919 by Virginia Woolf, 1979-05-15
  3. Virginia Woolf: Becoming a Writer by Katherine Dalsimer, 2002-03-01
  4. Palgrave Advances in Virginia Woolf Studies (Palgraves Advances)
  5. Virginia Woolf (Authors in Context) (Oxford World's Classics) by Michael Whitworth, 2009-08-03
  6. Virginia Woolf, New Critical Essays (Critical Studies Series) by Patricia Clements, 1983-11
  7. A Moment's Liberty: The Shorter Diary by Virginia Woolf, 1992-01-15
  8. A Life of One's Own: A Guide to Better Living Through the Work and Wisdom of Virginia Woolf by Ilana Simons, 2007-08-28
  9. Modernist Women and Visual Cultures: Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell, Photography, and Cinema by Maggie Humm, 2003-03-01
  10. Virginia Woolf by Mary Ann Caws, The Overlook Press, 2004-10
  11. The Years (Annotated) by Virginia Woolf, 2008-06-23
  12. The Unknown Virginia Woolf by Roger Poole, 1996-01-26
  13. The Voyage Out (Oxford World's Classics) by Virginia Woolf, 2009-08-30
  14. The Virginia Woolf Writers' Workshop: Seven Lessons to Inspire Great Writing by Danell Jones, 2008-11-25

41. Gale - Free Resources - Women's History - Biographies - Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf. 18821941 Essayist, novelist, critic, short story writer, diarist, and biographer. One of the most prominent literary figures of the
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/whm/bio/woolf_v.htm
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Women's History
Virginia Woolf
Essayist, novelist, critic, short story writer, diarist, and biographer One of the most prominent literary figures of the twentieth century, Woolf is chiefly renowned as an innovative novelist, and in particular for her contribution to the development of the stream-of-consciousness narrative technique. Her novels are noted for their subjective exploration of character and theme and their poetic prose, while her essays are commended for their perceptive observations on nearly the entire range of English literature, as well as many social and political concerns of the early twentieth century.

42. Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf (18821941) - in full Adeline Virginia Woolf, original surname Stephen. British author who made an original contribution to the form of the
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/vwoolf.htm
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B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) - in full Adeline Virginia Woolf, original surname Stephen British author who made an original contribution to the form of the novel - also distinguished feminist essayist, critic in The Times Literary Supplement , and a central figure of Bloomsbury group. Virginia Woolf's books were published by Hogart Press, which she founded with her husband, the critic and writer Leonard Woolf. Originally their printing machine was small enough to fit on a kitchen table, but their publications later included T.S. Eliot's Waste Land (1922), fiction by Maxim Gorky, E.M. Forster, and Katherine Mansfield, and the complete twenty-four-volume translation of the works of Sigmund Freud. "Have you any notion how many books are written about women in the course of one year? Have you any notion how many are written by men? Are you aware that you are, perhaps, the most discussed animal in the universe?" Virginia Woolf was born in London, as the daughter of Julia Jackson Duckworth, a member of the Duckworth publishing family, and Sir Leslie Stephen, a literary critic, a friend of Meredith, Henry James, Tennyson, Matthew Arnold, and George Eliot, and the founder of the

43. Virginia (Stephen) Woolf
Woolf, (Adeline) Virginia (18821941)(born Stephen) (The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts). El tiempo ingobernable la pelicula Las horas,
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0852694.html
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44. ResAnet Results Summary
Record Woolf, Virginia, 18821941. The waves the two holograph drafts / Virginia Woolf ; transcribed and edited by JW Graham.
http://www.collectionscanada.ca/wbin/resanet/resultsm/l=0/d=1/r=1/e=0/s=s/n=NK/h
Sort By: Title Author Date Search Term(s): Author=Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941 matches found
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The waves : the two holograph drafts / Virginia Woolf ; transcribed and edited by J. W. Graham. Toronto : University of Toronto Press : University of Western Ontario, c1976.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Freshwater : a comedy / [by] Virginia Woolf ; edited with a preface by Lucio P. Ruotolo ; illustrated by Loretta Trezzo. London : Hogarth Press, 1976.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The Pargiters : the novel-essay portion of 'The Years' / by Virginia Woolf ; edited with an introduction by Mitchell A. Leaska. London : Hogarth Press, 1978.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The waves / Virginia Woolf. 1st Harvest/HBJ ed. New York : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978, c1931.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Books and portraits : some further selections from the literary and biographical writings of Virginia Woolf / edited by Mary Lyon. London : Hogarth Press, 1977.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Moments of being : unpublished autobiographical writings / [by] Virginia Woolf ; edited with an introduction and notes by Jeanne Schulkind. London : Chatto and Windus for Sussex University Press, 1976.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The years / Virginia Woolf. London : Hogarth Press, 1958.
  • 45. Sommaire Des Résultats ResAnet
    Notice Woolf, Virginia, 18821941. The waves the two holograph drafts / Virginia Woolf ; transcribed and edited by JW Graham.
    http://www.collectionscanada.ca/wbin/resanet/resultsm/l=1/d=1/r=1/e=0/s=s/n=NK/h
    Trier par: Titre Auteur Date Terme(s) de recherche: Author=Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The waves : the two holograph drafts / Virginia Woolf ; transcribed and edited by J. W. Graham. Toronto : University of Toronto Press : University of Western Ontario, c1976.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Freshwater : a comedy / [by] Virginia Woolf ; edited with a preface by Lucio P. Ruotolo ; illustrated by Loretta Trezzo. London : Hogarth Press, 1976.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The Pargiters : the novel-essay portion of 'The Years' / by Virginia Woolf ; edited with an introduction by Mitchell A. Leaska. London : Hogarth Press, 1978.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The waves / Virginia Woolf. 1st Harvest/HBJ ed. New York : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978, c1931.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Books and portraits : some further selections from the literary and biographical writings of Virginia Woolf / edited by Mary Lyon. London : Hogarth Press, 1977.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. Moments of being : unpublished autobiographical writings / [by] Virginia Woolf ; edited with an introduction and notes by Jeanne Schulkind. London : Chatto and Windus for Sussex University Press, 1976.
  • Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941. The years / Virginia Woolf. London : Hogarth Press, 1958.
  • 46. Glbtq >> Literature >> Woolf, Virginia
    Woolf, Virginia (18821941) Woolf was born Adeline Virginia Stephen on January 25, 1882, in Hyde Park Gate, London, the daughter of Leslie Stephen,
    http://www.glbtq.com/literature/woolf_v.html
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    Woolf, Virginia (1882-1941)
    page: Passionate friendships with women were essential to the life and work of novelist Virginia Woolf. Woolf was born Adeline Virginia Stephen on January 25, 1882, in Hyde Park Gate, London, the daughter of Leslie Stephen, a man of letters, who in the same year began editing the Dictionary of National Biography and Julia Pattle Duckworth, a Victorian beauty immortalized in the photographs of Julia Margaret Cameron. Sponsor Message.
    Virginia's mother's first marriage ended with the death of her husband, leaving her with three children, one of whom, Gerald Duckworth, is known to have sexually molested Woolf as an adolescent. Her adolescence was marked as well by a sequence of deaths and the first bout of a mental illness that would haunt her for the rest of her life: Her mother died in 1895; her half-sister Stella, who served as mother-substitute, in 1897; her father in 1904 and her brother Thoby in 1906. She experienced her first mental breakdown at the age of thirteen following her mother's death, while the final one ended with her suicide when she walked into the river Ouse on March 28, 1941.

    47. Glbtq >> Literature >> Woolf, Virginia
    Woolf, Virginia (18821941) Best known for her relationship with Virginia Woolf and for her scandalous love affairs, Vita Sackville-West was a prolific
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    Woolf, Virginia (1882-1941)
    page: Not only does the novel make Vita immortal, Woolf in addition is able to grant her several wishes: having the best of both sexes and the most of each one, sexually. Woolf enables her to inherit the family estate, Knole, which Vita had been disinherited of due to her gender. She makes her an accomplished writer, rather than giving her the "pen of brass" she thought she really had. And finally she bestows on her beauty through Orlando's stately legs, thereby representing her as a "real woman," in contrast to her own sense of herself as a "eunuch." Sponsor Message.
    And yet Woolf's one venture into female eroticism ended with Orlando , capturing in print what she wasn't able to have in life due to Vita's infidelity and her own stifled sexuality. Originally entitled "The Jessamy Brides" ("Jessamy" referring to a dandy or fop), Orlando represents both what Woolf could never be or have except through her art.

    48. GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography Of Virginia Woolf
    Biography of Virginia Woolf (18821941). Virginia Woolf. In 1878, Leslie Stephen and Julia Jackson Duckworth married, a second marriage for both.
    http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/authors/about_virginia_woolf.html
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    Biography of Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)
    Virginia Woolf In 1878, Leslie Stephen and Julia Jackson Duckworth married, a second marriage for both. They gave birth to Adeline Virginia Stephen four years later on the 26th of March at 22 Hyde Park Gate, London. Virginia followed Vanessa and Julian Thoby and preceded Adrian. Leslie Stephen began his career as a clergyman but soon became agnostic and took up journalism. He and Julia provided their children with a home of wealth and comfort. Virginia, though denied the formal education allowed to males, was able to take advantage of her father's abundant library, to observe his writing talent, and to be surrounded by intellectual conversation. The same year Virginia was born, for instance, her father began editing the Dictionary of National Biography, a huge undertaking. Virginia's mother was more delicate and helped to bring out the more emotional sides of her children. Both parents were very strong personalities. By them, Virginia would feel overshadowed for years. Virginia would suffer through three major mental breakdowns during her lifetime. In all likelihood, her compulsive drive to work, which she acquired from her parents, combined with her natural fragile state largely contributed to these breakdowns. Yet, the situation was more complicated. Her first breakdown was suffered shortly following the death of her mother in 1895, which Virginia later described as "the greatest disaster that could have happened." Some have suggested that Virginia may have felt guilt over choosing her father as the favorite parent. However, her mental state could not have been aided by the excessive mourning period enacted by her father. Two years later, Stella Duckworth, Virginia's stepsister, died. Stella had assumed charge of the household duties after Julia's death, causing a rift between her and Virginia. Virginia fell sick soon after her death. The same year, Virginia began her first diary.

    49. Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
    The film s title refers to Virginia Woolf (18821941), an influential British feminist writer who pioneered the stream of consciousness literary style
    http://www.filmsite.org/whos.html
    Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
    Greatest Films www.filmsite.org and www.greatestfilms.org
    With descriptive review commentaries and background history on many classic, landmark films in cinematic history, especially American/Hollywood films. Including posters, Academy Awards history, film genres, film terms, film history by decade, trivia, and lots of lists of 'best' films, stars, scenes, quotes, resources, etc. Buy This Film
    Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), a famous and shocking black comedy, was based on Edward Albee's scandalous play (Ernest Lehman's screenplay left the dialogue of the play virtually intact). It was first performed in New York in October of 1962, and it captured the New York Drama Critics Circle Award and the Tony Award for the 1962-3 season. The film's title refers to Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), an influential British feminist writer who pioneered the 'stream of consciousness' literary style while examining the psychological and emotional motives of her characters. [Perhaps the 'fear' of VW refers to the film's characters who are suffering marital discord in the emotionally-draining film, and who may have 'known' that she suffered from mental illness and ultimately went insane and committed suicide.] The title is also a parody of Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?

    50. Virginia Woolf (née Stephen) (1882-1941), Novelist And Critic
    National Portrait Gallery, list of portraits for Virginia Woolf (née Stephen) including Virginia Woolf (née Stephen) by George Charles Beresford,
    http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?linkID=mp04923

    51. PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Author - Index - Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941 -
    Woolf, Virginia, 18821941 W Index Main Index Night and Day The Voyage Out Opera - The World s FASTER Browser! WordCruncher Promo.Net
    http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/i-_woolf_virginia_.html
    Etexts by Author Web Site Designed and Administered by Pietro Di Miceli , webmaster of PROMO.NET
    The Original URL of Project Gutenberg Web site is: http://promo.net/pg/

    52. Virginia Woolf
    Woolf, Virginia (18821941). a web guide to literary criticism on Virginia Woolf from literaryhistory.com. main page 20th century poetry authors,
    http://www.literaryhistory.com/20thC/Woolf.htm
    Woolf, Virginia (1882-1941)
    a web guide to literary criticism on Virginia Woolf from literaryhistory.com
    main page 20th century poetry authors, alphabetical 19th century authors
    General Articles
    An introduction to Virginia Woolf by professor John Mepham, from the Literary Encyclopedia. The Virginia Woolf of 'The Hours' Angers the Real One's Fans By Patricia Cohen in the New York Times, 2/15/03 Nosing around in a life: Getting at the real person isn't easy. By Frank Wilson. Discusses Virginia Woolf's Nose, By Hermione Lee, Princeton University Press. In Philadelphia Inquirer, May. 15, 2005 On a newly discovered notebook of Virginia Woolf's Article in the (U.K.) Guardian newspaper by Doris Lessing, June 14, 2003 An article compares the Woolf's novel Orlando with Sally Potter's film version . "An off-beat adaptation: Orlando ," by Timotheos Roussosm. In Philament vol.3, April 2004 A introduction to Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury group from the Books and Writers web site maintained by the Kuusankoski Public Library, Finland. The New York Times archives on Virginia Woolf contain extensive material, including newspaper articles and reviews from her novels "Mrs. Dalloway" (1925); "The Common Reader" (1925); "To The Lighthouse" (1927); "Orlando" (1928); "The Waves" (1931); "The Years" (1937); "Between The Acts" (1941); "The Captain's Death Bed and Other Essays" (1950), reviewed by Katherine Anne Porter;"A Writer's Diary" (1954), reviewed by Elizabeth Bowen. (These New York Times articles are free, but require a one-time registration.)

    53. Understanding MARC Authority Records: Part 12, Bibliography, And Review
    O72 Authorized Heading 100 1 $a Woolf, Virginia, $d 18821941 See From Tracing Source Data Found 670 $a NUCMC files $b (Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941;
    http://www.loc.gov/marc/uma/pt12.html
    Library of Congress Standards MARC Understanding MARC Authority Records
    MARC 21 REFERENCE MATERIALS (continued)
    Part XII: Sample Records
    Selected Bibliography

    Selected Library of Congress Cataloging Distribution Service Publications

    MARC 21 Content Designators: A Review
    Part XII
    Sample Records
    The examples of authority records in this booklet are based on records from the Library of Congress Name Authority File (LCNAF). Some of the information has been, however, slightly changed to illustrate the fields described in this booklet. The examples are first shown in a tagged display used by most data editing screens found in library systems. They are also shown in a formatted display that may be viewed by library patrons and librarians. More examples of MARC 21 authority records are found in the MARC 21 Format for Authority Data or online at: www.loc.gov/marc/authority/examples.html
    1. MARC 21 Communications Formatted Record
    The block of data below is what the programmer sees when he looks at the contents of a MARC file. The tags do not appear before the fields, but a directory to the data tells which tags should be used and where each field starts (in other words, where each tag belongs). Cracking the code, or, Interpreting the Directory:

    54. Virginia Woolf Collection
    Virginia Woolf, 18821941 Collection, 1922-1956. 1 box (.417 linear feet). Acquisition Purchases and gifts, 1959-1997 Access Open for research
    http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/woolf.virginia.html
    Virginia Woolf, 1882-1941
    Collection, 1922-1956
    1 box (.417 linear feet) Acquisition: Purchases and gifts, 1959-1997
    Access: Open for research
    Processed by: Chelsea S. Jones, 1998
    RLIN Record ID:
    Table of Contents
    Biographical Sketch
    Born early in 1882 to Sir Leslie and Julia Stephen, Adeline Virginia Stephen (Woolf), was the third of four children (Vanessa, Thoby, and Adrian). Though she received little formal education, her father, a writer and editor with strong interests in literary history, encouraged her to read extensively and gave her general advice on writing. Her father's connections to the literary world brought Virginia into contact with many well-known writers, including James Russell Lowell (Virginia's godfather), George Meredith, and Anne Thackeray Ritchie. The death of her mother in 1895, when Virginia was thirteen, led to the first in a life long series of bouts of "madness" or depression, which plagued Woolf and which she treated with rest, milk, and long walks. The death of her step-sister in 1897 and then her father in 1904, though tragic, gave Virginia and her siblings the impetus and opportunity to move from the family home in respectable Hyde Park Gate to a new home in the less respectable neighborhood of Bloomsbury. It was here that the Bloomsbury group, formed at the Stephen's Thursday evenings "at-home," got its start. Groups of Thoby's friends from Cambridge visited to participate in wide-ranging discussions about politics, economics, and art. In 1906, Thoby died and Vanessa married Clive Bell, leaving Virginia and her younger brother Adrian to set up house together at a new Bloomsbury address.

    55. The Bloomsbury Group -- Virginia Woolf
    Virginia Woolf 18821941, Third child of Sir Leslie and Julia Stephen, Virginia began at a young age to express herself in writing, crafting fanciful
    http://therem.net/bloom-virginia.htm
    Virginia Woolf
    Third child of Sir Leslie and Julia Stephen, Virginia began at a young age to express herself in writing, crafting fanciful newsletters for her parents and her first book review at the age of 9. Her later novels, short stories and essays combine a penetrating intelligence with lively humor and a commitment to experimentation in form and content. The shadow of her extraordinary literary talent was a recurrent mental illness that caused her first breakdown in 1895, after the death of her mother, and would reappear at intervals throughout her life, eventually prompting her to suicide in 1941. Married Leonard Woolf in 1912. Establishment of Hogarth Press, 1917. "She might have become a glorified diseuse , who frittered away her broader effects by mischievousness, and she did give that impression to some who met her in the flesh; there were moments when she could scarcely see the busts for the moustaches she pencilled on them, and when the bust was a modern one, whether of a gentleman in a top hat or a youth on a pylon, it had no chance of remaining sublime. But in her writing, even in her light writing, central control entered. She was master of her complicated equipment, and though most of us like to write sometimes seriously and sometimes in fun, few of us can so manage the two impulses that they speed each other up, as hers did."
    Virginia Woolf, The Rede Lecture

    56. Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)
    This Web site is dedicated to the wonderful world of the short story and to all who enjoy reading shorts stories as I do. I will try to add a few short
    http://www.classicshorts.com/bios/biowoolf.html
    Virginia Woolf
    Virginia Stephen's father was a scholar and an essayist-Sir Leslie Stephen; his first wife was a daughter of Thackeray, and his friends were the illustrious of the day: Hardy, Meredith, Stevenson, Ruskin, Bryce. In this household, the Stephen girls, Virginia and her sisters, grew up shy and lovely, "in plain black dresses," as William Rothenstein describes them, "with white lace collars and wrist bands, looking as though they had walked straight out of a canvas by Watts or Burne-Jones."
    After Virginia's marriage to Leonard Woolf in 1912, the new Woolf house in Bloomsbury became quite as intellectual a gathering place as her father's had been, with the emphasis now on Freud and psychoanalysis, and Virginia the center, rather than a sideline observer. The Woolfs had a small hand press at this time on which they got out limited editions under the imprint of the Hogarth Press; this, after the war, developed into a successful publishing house. In 1918 they published T. S. Eliot's Poems , and Prelude , by an obscure young author named Katherine Mansfield. Like Katherine Mansfield, Virginia Woolf wrote with freshness of a gracious and lovely world, but hers is a world pervaded with loneliness. In March, 1941, she disappeared from her home and was later found drowned. The note she left behind read: 'I have the feeling that I shall go mad and cannot go on any longer in these terrible times. "A Haunted House" comes from the posthumous volume of stories by that title.

    57. MASC25
    Holding Institution, Full details. There is 1 result matching the heading Woolf, Virginia, 18821941. Monks House Books, University of Sussex Expand
    http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ls/masc25/browse.php?term=Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941

    58. VIRGINIA WOOLF AT ASH RARE BOOKS
    Woolf, Virginia (Adeline Virginia), 18821941 NIGHT AND DAY. BY Virginia Woolf, AUTHOR OF THE VOYAGE OUT . London Duckworth Co., (1919).
    http://www.ashrare.com/virginia_woolf.html
    VIRGINIA WOOLF FIRST EDITIONS - ASH RARE BOOKS
    VIRGINIA WOOLF AT
    ASH RARE BOOKS
    43 HURON ROAD
    LONDON SW17 8RE
    UNITED KINGDOM
    Tel: (+44)-(0)20-8672-2263
    e-mail: books@ashrare.com
    VISITORS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
    VIRGINIA WOOLF FIRST EDITIONS CLICK ON REFRESH TO ENSURE YOU HAVE THE UPDATED VERSION OF THIS PAGE WOOLF, Virginia (Adeline Virginia), 1882-1941 : NIGHT AND DAY. BY VIRGINIA WOOLF, AUTHOR OF "THE VOYAGE OUT".
    Crown 8vo. [iv],538,[ii]pp. Bound in a handsome recent full black morocco, banded and gilt; top edge gilt; a few very minor internal marks, spots and faint creases, but a very attractive copy. Kirkpatrick A4a. To confirm availability and to purchase this book please note the stock number and go to the database . Enter the number in the stock/order number box - press the search button - and a shopping basket should appear. Or simply call us or e-mail books@ashrare.com WOOLF, Virginia (Adeline Virginia), 1882-1941 : MRS. DALLOWAY.
    Crown 8vo. (294)pp. Bound (without blanks) in an elegant recent half red morocco; top edge gilt; original cloth backstrip and upper panel preserved at rear; mild spotting of prelims, but a most attractive copy. Kirkpatrick A9a. Woolmer 82. To confirm availability and to purchase this book please note the stock number and go to the database . Enter the number in the stock/order number box - press the search button - and a shopping basket should appear. Or simply call us or e-mail books@ashrare.com

    59. BC 1174 First Year Seminar -- Goldstein
    Woolf, Virginia, 18821941 Criticism and interpretation; Call numbers for literature and literary criticism start with P (How to understand call numbers
    http://www.barnard.edu/library/courses/Spring2005/BC1174Goldstein.htm
    Barnard College Library Research Guide
    First Year Seminar
    , Spring 2005 Reinventing Literary History The Legacy of the Mediterranean Professor: Doug Goldstein Librarian: Jenna Freedman
    Reference Resources
    Find Books Find Articles ... Find Help REFERENCE RESOURCES
    Encyclopedias, dictionaries and other reference books are useful for:
    • an overview of a topic background information bibliographies
    The reference books in this list are available in the Barnard Library Reference Area on the second floor. Title Call Number in Reference Area Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History Encyclopedia of American Social History Encyclopedia of European Social History Dictionary of Literary Themes and Motifs Literature and Its Times World Literature and Its Times Encyclopedia of Literary Modernism Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism CLC: Contemporary Literary Criticism TCLC: Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism British Writers A Mary Shelley Encyclopedia The Oxford Reader's Companion to Conrad Virginia Woolf A to Z American Writers DLB: Dictionary of Literary Biography Zora Neale Hurston : an Annotated Bibliography and Reference Guide Knowledge Notes from LION on To the Lighthouse Literary Index from Gale Group
    USING CLIO TO FIND BOOKS AND JOURNALS You can enter CLIO from the Barnard Library home page or from the Columbia University LibraryWeb
    • CLIO (Columbia Libraries Information Online) is the catalog for the Columbia University Libraries and includes Barnard Library's holdings.

    60. MSN Encarta - Virginia Woolf
    Woolf, Virginia (18821941), British novelist, essayist, and critic, who helped create the modern novel. Her writing often explores the concepts of time,
    http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761577881/Virginia_Woolf.html
    Web Search: Encarta Home ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta Upgrade your Encarta Experience Spend less time searching and more time learning. Learn more Tasks Related Items more... Further Reading Editors' picks for Woolf, Virginia
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    Woolf, Virginia
    Encyclopedia Article Multimedia 2 items Article Outline Introduction Life Works I
    Introduction
    Print Preview of Section Woolf, Virginia (1882-1941), British novelist, essayist, and critic, who helped create the modern novel. Her writing often explores the concepts of time, memory, and people’s inner consciousness, and is remarkable for its humanity and depth of perception. Before the early 1900s, fiction emphasized plot as well as detailed descriptions of characters and settings. Events in the external world, such as a marriage, murder, or deception, were the most important aspects of a story. Characters' interior, or mental, lives served mainly to prepare for or motivate such meaningful external occurrences. Woolf's novels, however, emphasized patterns of consciousness rather than sequences of events in the external world. Influenced by the works of French writer Marcel Proust and Irish writer James Joyce , among others, Woolf strove to create a literary form that would convey inner life. To this end, she elaborated a technique known as

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