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Virginia WoolfA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Woolf introduces her thesis: Women will remain unable to truly express themselves while they are confined to the sexist expectations of patriarchal society. She writes that “a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction” (19). The concept of having “a room of her own” refers both to the concrete notion that women need their own space to write and the abstract notion of the room as a metaphor for women’s place in society. Women cannot achieve the same accomplishments because they are neither trained nor permitted the same creative freedoms as men.
Woolf uses an imaginary narrator to guide the narrative: Mary Beton sits beside a river and considers the relationship between women and fiction. She is at Oxbridge, a fictional university that represents prestigious institutions like Oxford or Cambridge. Mary describes developing an idea via metaphor: Like a fish left to fatten in a stream, an idea must be grown from a thought through constructive processes. A worker at Oxbridge sends Mary’s “little fish into hiding” (21), or causes her to forget an idea, when he prohibits her from walking across the lawn because she is a woman.
By Virginia Woolf
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Between The Acts
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Flush: A Biography
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Jacob's Room
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Kew Gardens
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Modern Fiction
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Moments of Being
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Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown
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Mrs. Dalloway
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Orlando
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The Death of the Moth
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The Duchess and the Jeweller
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The Lady in the Looking Glass
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The Mark on the Wall
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The New Dress
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The Voyage Out
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The Waves
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Three Guineas
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