Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources
By (Author) Vara S. Neverow
Edited by Professor Jeanne Dubino
Edited by Dr Gill Lowe
Edited by Dr Kathryn Simpson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
26th November 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary reference works
Contains 4 hardbacks
2974g
Bringing together over 70 influential critical articles, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources is a collection of significant academic writing on the work of the great modernist writer, Virginia Woolf. Beginning with the academic rediscovery of Woolf in the mid-1970s, this collection charts the development of Woolf scholarship up to 2015. It comprises examinations of Woolfs fiction and non-fictional writing, important manuscript and archival discoveries and biographical analyses, as well as critical work on Woolfs feminism, aesthetics and cultural writing. Each volume includes a substantial contextualising introduction surveying Woolf studies in the decade covered. Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources is an essential academic resource for scholars and common readers alike.
Vara S. Neverow is Professor of English and Womens Studies at Southern Connecticut State University, USA. She is co-editor of Virginia Woolf: Twenty-First-Century Approaches (2014) and editor of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany since 2003. Jeanne Dubino is Professor of English and Global Studies at Appalachian State University, USA. She is the editor of Virginia Woolf and the Literary Marketplace (2010) and co-editor of multiple volumes, most recently Politics, Mobility, and Identity in Travel Writing (2015), Representing the Modern Animal in Culture (2014) and Virginia Woolf: Twenty-First-Century Approaches (2014). Gill Lowe is Visiting Fellow in English at the University of Suffolk, UK. She is the author of Versions of Julia: Five Biographical Constructions (2005) and editor of Hyde Park Gate News, the Stephen Family Newspaper (2005). She is co-editor of Virginia Woolf: Twenty-First-Century Approaches (2014). Kathryn Simpson is an independent scholar. Her previous books include Virginia Woolf: A Guide for the Perplexed (Bloomsbury, 2016) and Gifts, Markets and Economies of Desire in Virginia Woolf, (2008). She is co-editor of Virginia Woolf: Twenty-First-Century Approaches (2014).