Materialism virginia woolf biography
Her goal in Vibrant....
Virginia Woolf, Literary Materiality, and Feminist Aesthetics: From Pen to Print interrogates the relationship between the material.Virginia Woolf
(1882–1941)
British novelist and critic. She rejected in her writing the superficial materialism of her contemporaries and broke new ground by writing with great poetic intensity about the feelings that constituted reality for her and her characters.
Virginia Woolf was born Virginia Stephen, daughter of the eminent man of letters Sir Leslie Stephen (1832–1904) by his second wife.
As a nervous and delicate child, she was educated at home, mainly by her father. Her mother's death in 1895 and her father's death in 1904 caused her first major breakdowns.
In "Modern Fiction," Virginia Woolf notoriously designates the term "materialists" to describe the failure of Edwardian writers to present "life itself (Essays.
Virginia, her brother Thoby, and her sister Vanessa (1879–1961) then set up house in the Bloomsbury district of London, gathering around them the Bloomsbury group of writers and artists, many of whom had been at Cambridge with Thoby.
The group included the writer Leonard Woolf (1880–1969) and Clive Bell (1881–1964), whom Vanessa later married. Other members of the group were Roger Fry, J. M. Keynes, and Lytton Strachey