Fr. 69.00

Virginia Woolfs Good Housekeeping Essays

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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List of contents

Contents

Introduction

Woolf’s essays and their critical appraisal.

Woolf’s essays in Good Housekeeping magazine. Composition, publication, reception

The purpose of the book

Part I: The Good Housekeeping Essays as Intermedial essays

Chapter One

The humble art of description in the ‘Six Articles on London life’

Introduction

The documentary impulse

Practicing the art of description in ‘The Docks of London’ and ‘Oxford Street Tide’

Renewing the art of description in Good Housekeeping magazine

Developing the ‘critical attitude’

Conclusion

Chapter Two

The Art of photography in the Good Housekeeping essays

‘The Docks of London’ as an apparatus for the other essays

The photographic method in ‘Great Men’s Houses’

The photographic method in ‘Abbeys and Cathedrals’

Chapter Three

The art of architecture in the Good Housekeeping essays

Redefining architecture as democracy in ‘This is the House of Commons’ and ‘Portrait of a Londoner’

Intermediality and Woolf’s ethics of doubt

Constructing the essay as an intermedial form

Part II: ‘The Common Pool’

Chapter Four

Woolf’s ghosts in the Good Housekeeping essays

Woolf’s plea for democracy: a dialogue with her forebears

The intermedial dialogue with John Ruskin

‘Adaptive reuse’ and the political debates of the 1930s

Chapter Five

Virginia Woolf and Heritage

Woolf’s survival theory

Poverty as usus: the ‘common pool’

An ethical posture?

Poverty as an economic and aesthetic concept

Woolf and Benjamin

Part III Reassessing the Good Housekeeping essays

Chapter 6

The Good Housekeeping essays as cultural and creative essays

The Good Housekeeping essays as part and parcel of Woolf’s essays

The theoretical thrust of Woolf’s essays

Woolf’s ‘humble’ theory

Chapter Seven

The Good Housekeeping essays at the crossroads

The photographic turn

Implementing the theory of usus

Constructing history as trace

The political turn

Conclusion

The Good Housekeeping essays and The Arcades Project

Straddling the divide between high and low culture

About the author

Christine Reynier is Professor of English Literature at the University Paul-Valéry Montpellier3, France. She is the author of Virginia Woolf's Ethics of the Short Story (Palgrave 2009) and a number of articles on modernist writers (Ford Madox Ford, Rebecca West, Virginia Woolf, etc.). She is co-editor (with M. Duyck and M. Basseler) of Reframing the Modernist Short Story (Journal of the Short Story in English, 2015) and (with B. Coste and C. Delyfer) of Reconnecting Aestheticism and Modernism (Routledge, 2017).

Summary

This first book-length study of what Woolf calls ‘little articles’ proposes to reassess the commissioned essays and read them in a chronological sequence in their original context as well as in the larger context of Woolf’s work.

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