Virginia Woolf's drama: her search for form
dc.contributor.author
Stewart, James Clark Quinn
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-01-31T11:25:03Z
dc.date.available
2018-01-31T11:25:03Z
dc.date.issued
1990
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
Virginia Woolf's essays on the actresses Sarah Bernhardt, and 'Rachel',
reveal her excitement over the ways in which these women's
art resembled her own writerly situation. They transvalued their
sex's conventional enforced spectatorship, into public metaphor
which could criticise the role-playing endemic in their society,
doing so by taking up an even more personal possession of the social
obligation incumbent on women to 'act'.
en
dc.description.abstract
Woolf's own subversive retreat into a notable objectivity of vision
results in vivid caricature and acute satire. But it also affords
her a breadth of outlook which is panoramic. This vantage - from
which she sees facts both comic and pathetic more or less as pure
spectacle - transforms her outlook in the direction of tragicomedy,
at the same time accentuating her scenic sense, and her ear for
token dialogue, her eye for gestural revelation, and her sensitivity
to dramatic value.
en
dc.description.abstract
Her tragicomic (or, in her own terms 'humorous') perception of char¬
acter and of situation, leads to an inchoate search fo^ significant
form, which emerges into ever clearer technical awareness. Formally,
she wishes to incorporate dramatic modes into the novel. There are
various practical effects. Her active lyricism is a dramatic epiphenomenon;
and her narrativity, often spectacular, offers deictic
experience to non-passive readers.
en
dc.description.abstract
As part of her enterprise, she must define herself against James's
attitude to his audience, Conrad's feeling about action, Wagner's
control over the Gesamtkunsti^erk, and the Renaiss nee drama's sheer
noise. Especially during the thirties, Woolf must negotiate fictions
which court, but do not appease, an audience with, in that partisan
decade, its prejudices about 'action'. She discovers, during the
twenties, how to preserve her own and the audience's privacy as proof
against melodrama, by redefining the notional solitude of Marvell,
just as, earlier, she faults those other solitaries, Emerson and
Thoreau, for lack of social sense.
en
dc.description.abstract
Woolf's expressivity is also a pre-intentional tendency to verbal
play, sometimes surfacing as marked punning, in her experimental work.
Language itself puts on an act as surface, much as the drama deploys
exteriors. Strategically and lexically, Woolf stages her fictions as
productions of her existential and gender situation. This gives to
them their metaphoric status, which some see as artistic passivity,
and others as surrogate activism.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/26972
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2017 Block 15
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
en
dc.title
Virginia Woolf's drama: her search for form
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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