Blacklight

Mrs. Dalloway : authoritative text, contexts, criticism /

Title:
Mrs. Dalloway : authoritative text, contexts, criticism /
Author:
Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941, author.
Format:
Book
Institution:
Emerson College
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES -- Early Writings -- Hyde Park Gate News -- Cristmas Number, vol. i, No. 51 (December 1891) -- [Mrs Leslie Stephen], vol. ii, No. 25 (July 4, 1892) -- [The Dog], vol. ii, No. 43 (November 7, 1892) -- Early Diary Entry -- Giggleswick 1906 -- Diary -- February 1, 1915 [A violent explosion] -- December 14, 1917 [A quiet man] -- April 9, 1918 [My father was a German] -- May 1, 1918 [The Equator] -- May 28, 1918 [An enormous pocket knife] -- June 8, 1920 [A complete case of servant's hysteria] -- September 15, 1920 [Especially the satire of the Dalloways] -- October 25, 1920 [A little strip of pavement over an abyss] -- April 18, 1921 [Lunching with a cabinet minister] -- June 2, 1921 [Actually under this roof] -- October 4, 1922 [I like reading my own writing] -- October 8, 1922 [Kitty Maxse's death] -- June 19, 1923 [Feeling things deeply] -- August 6, 1923 [Hollyhocks, decapitated, swam in a bowl] -- April 5, 1924 [Angelica's accident] -- November 18, 1924 [The mad chapters of Mrs D] -- January 6, 1925 [Proofs will come next week] -- April 19, 1925 [Mrs Dalloway is a success] -- June 18, 1925 [Lytton does not like Mrs Dalloway] -- Letters -- To Emma Vaughan, April 1899 [How I do love London] -- To Thoby Stephen, November 5, 1901 [No true Shakespearian] -- To Madge Vaughan, early January 1905 [Teaching in the Waterloo Road] -- To Violet Dickinson, mid-February 1905 [Dr Savage's dinner] -- To Violet Dickinson, October 1, 1907 [The poet Keats] -- To Vanessa Bell, August 20, 1908 [I have no wish to perish] -- To T. S. Eliot, April 14, 1922 [As for my own story] -- To Gerald Brenan, December 25, 1922 [You said you were very wretched] -- To Vita Sackville-West, August 19, 1924 [London and the marshes] -- SELECTED SHORT STORIES -- Mrs Dalloway in Bond Street -- The Introduction -- The Man Who Loved His Kind -- SELECTED NONFICTION -- Review of Dorothy Richardson's The Tunnel (1919) -- From 22 Hyde Park Gate (1920) -- From Old Bloomsbury (1922) -- On Not Knowing Greek (1925) -- Modern Fiction (1925) -- Introduction to Modern Library Edition of Mrs. Dalloway (1928) -- LITERARY SOURCES -- Homer -- From The Odyssey, Book 5 (late-eighth-to late-seventh-century B.C.E.) -- King James Bible -- From The Book of Ruth (c. fourth century B.C.E.) / William Shakespeare -- From Richard II (1595) -- From Othello (1604) -- From Cymbeline (1610) / -- From The Rape of the Lock (1717) Alexander Pope-- From Ode to a Nightingale (1819) / John Keats -- Allerseelen = All Souls' Day (c. 1863) / Hermann Von Gilm -- From Ann Veronica: A Modern Romance (1909) / H. G. Wells -- The Soldier (1915) / Rupert Brooke -- From The Waste Land (1922) / T. S. Eliot -- The Garden Party (1922) / Katherine Mansfield -- HISTORICAL CONTEXTS -- The Repression of War Experience (1917) / W. H. R. Rivers -- The Novels of Dorothy Richardson (1918) / May Sinclair -- [The War Office Committee of Enquiry into "Shell-Shock"] (1989) / Ted Bogacz -- [Mrs Dalloway and the Armenians] (1998) / Trudi Tate -- From Mrs. Woolf and the Servants (2007) / Alison Light -- [Mrs. Dalloway and the Influenza Pandemic] (2015) / Elizabeth Outka -- Criticism -- EARLY REVIEWS -- A Long, Long Chapter [Review of Mrs. Dalloway] (1925) / Anonymous -- A Novelist's Experiment [Review of Mrs. Dalloway] (1925)/ Anonymous -- The Stream of Consciousness Novel (1926) / E. W. Hawkins -- RECENT CRITICISM -- Sex, Lies, and Selling Out: Women and Civilization's Discontents (2002) / Christine Froula -- [Tonal Cues and Character in Mrs. Dalloway] (2010) / Molly Hite -- From Feminist Killjoys (2010) / Sara Ahmed -- Mrs. Dalloway and the Gaze of Total War (2015) / Paul K. Saint-Amour -- [Miss Kilman's Mackintosh] (2016) / Celia Marshik.

Online access:
No online access
Library holdings:
Emerson Main Stacks
PR6045.O72 M7 2021Available