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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... women. I am afraid it will not be taken seriously. . . . It is a trifle, I shall say; so it is, but I wrote it with ... women, but to economic and world crisis. The name of Mussolini is spoken by Woolf in this essay, but his presence is ...
... women. I am afraid it will not be taken seriously. . . . It is a trifle, I shall say; so it is, but I wrote it with ... 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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... women of genius, not with that of ordinary women; her plea is that we create a world in which Shakespeare's sister might survive her gift, not one in which a miner's wife can have her rights to property; her passion is for literature ...
... women of genius, not with that of ordinary women; her plea is that we create a world in which Shakespeare's sister might survive her gift, not one in which a miner's wife can have her rights to property; her passion is for literature ...
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... Women have, for Woolf (how unrealistically hopeful her illusion), given up their roles as "looking-glasses ... women when she begins her quest to discover why women are so poor (their college serves stringy beef, custard and prunes), why ...
... Women have, for Woolf (how unrealistically hopeful her illusion), given up their roles as "looking-glasses ... women when she begins her quest to discover why women are so poor (their college serves stringy beef, custard and prunes), why ...
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... women are poor because, instead of making money, they have had children. The second question is far more complex, and her attempt to answer it leads her to history. She reads the lives of women and concludes that if a woman were to have ...
... women are poor because, instead of making money, they have had children. The second question is far more complex, and her attempt to answer it leads her to history. She reads the lives of women and concludes that if a woman were to have ...
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... women at the street corners with their arms akimbo . . . or from the violet-sellers and the match-sellers and the old crones stationed under doorways; or from drifting girls whose faces, like waves in sun and cloud, signal the coming of ...
... women at the street corners with their arms akimbo . . . or from the violet-sellers and the match-sellers and the old crones stationed under doorways; or from drifting girls whose faces, like waves in sun and cloud, signal the coming of ...
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