A Room Of One's Own: The Virginia Woolf Library Authorized EditionHarperCollins, 27.12.1989 - 128 Seiten Why is it that men, and not women, have always had power, wealth, and fame? Woolf cites the two keys to freedom: fixed income and one’s own room. Foreword by Mary Gordon. |
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... windows in despair. Understandably, the political attentions of intellectuals were turned not to the problems of women, but to economic and world crisis. The name of Mussolini is spoken by Woolf in this essay, but his presence is ...
... windows in despair. Understandably, the political attentions of intellectuals were turned not to the problems of women, but to economic and world crisis. The name of Mussolini is spoken by Woolf in this essay, but his presence is ...
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... window-seat." Woolf says that we who live after the First World War have lost something beautiful, some necessary grace. We do not hum under our breaths; we are cats without tails; we are encumbered by our anger, our sense of doom, more ...
... window-seat." Woolf says that we who live after the First World War have lost something beautiful, some necessary grace. We do not hum under our breaths; we are cats without tails; we are encumbered by our anger, our sense of doom, more ...
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... window and sees a man and a woman getting into a taxi. This sight she finds so immensely attractive, so profoundly soothing, that it reminds her how unnatural it is to think of the sexes as separate, how natural to think of them as xi.
... window and sees a man and a woman getting into a taxi. This sight she finds so immensely attractive, so profoundly soothing, that it reminds her how unnatural it is to think of the sexes as separate, how natural to think of them as xi.
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