Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Bloomsbury
- 2 Virginia Woolf’s early novels: Finding a voice
- 3 From Mrs Dalloway to The Waves: New elegy and lyric experimentalism
- 4 The novels of the 1930s and the impact of history
- 5 Virginia Woolf’s essays
- 6 Virginia Woolf, modernism and modernity
- 7 The socio-political vision of the novels
- 8 Woolf’s feminism and feminism’s Woolf
- 9 Virginia Woolf and sexuality
- 10 Virginia Woolf, Empire and race
- 11 Virginia Woolf and visual culture
- 12 Virginia Woolf and the public sphere
- Guide to further reading
- Index
7 - The socio-political vision of the novels
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- 1 Bloomsbury
- 2 Virginia Woolf’s early novels: Finding a voice
- 3 From Mrs Dalloway to The Waves: New elegy and lyric experimentalism
- 4 The novels of the 1930s and the impact of history
- 5 Virginia Woolf’s essays
- 6 Virginia Woolf, modernism and modernity
- 7 The socio-political vision of the novels
- 8 Woolf’s feminism and feminism’s Woolf
- 9 Virginia Woolf and sexuality
- 10 Virginia Woolf, Empire and race
- 11 Virginia Woolf and visual culture
- 12 Virginia Woolf and the public sphere
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
'The greatest benefit we owe to the artist,' George Eliot once claimed, 'whether painter, poet, or novelist, is the extension of our sympathies.' As richly enlarging as they are tightly controlled, Woolf's novels 'benefit' the reader in just this fashion. But while it has long been agreed that they are geared towards broadening our aesthetic responsiveness - as we read Woolf's novels, we are prompted to question how and why we read fiction and to acknowledge the limitations of our answers - it is only relatively recently that the degree to which her novels seem designed to extend our ethical and political 'sympathies' has begun to be recognised. An ideological bias, unobtrusive but palpable, is at work, for instance, in The Voyage Out, Jacob's Room, To the Lighthouse and The Years, and readers of these novels are challenged to think just as hard about the wider moral, social and political issues which the novels encompass as they are required to come to terms with the writerly goad of the texts. As early as 1908, Woolf noted in her journal that she had grown to 'distrust description' and that she wished to 'write not only with the eye, but with the mind; & discover real things beneath the show' (EJ, p. 384), and this was to become her principal aspiration as a novelist. In the same year, Woolf congratulated E. M. Forster for having won her over to what she presumed to be his own position in A Room with a View. 'To be able to make one thus a partisan is so much of an achievement, the sense that one sees truth from falsehood is so inspiriting, that it would be right to recommend people to read Mr Forster's book on these accounts alone.'
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf , pp. 124 - 141Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
- 2
- Cited by