Kategorien: Alle - memory - feminism

von Alissa Machin Vor 7 Jahren

179

Extended Essay planning

The exploration of parallel plotlines between Virginia Woolf and Florbela Espanca delves into the intricate connections across transnational literature. It navigates through themes of cartography, both literal and metaphorical, as it maps out locations and memory within literary works.

Extended Essay planning

corpus

experiences as a body

Woman
Female identity

alternatives in "parallelos"

PARALLEL PLOTLINES:VIRGINIA WOOLF AND FLORBELA ESPANCA ON THE TRANSCANONICAL MAP

Parallel

complementary textualities
alongside one another
"The room next door"

Norah Nicholls

the interwar female professional

Anglo-american tradition of literary criticism

Plotlines

Cartography
location

Loci

rooms

"The Open Door"/"Opening the Door"/ "A Tap on the Door" as provisional titles for "Three Guineas"

Aesthetics of transgression

"domestic architecture"

stanzas

Florbela's sonnets

Form

A Room of One's Own

Sequels- Three Guineas

John Lehmann

double acts

the backroom studio

The Hogarth Press

1917

D.H Lawrence: Studies in Classic American Literature

Lytton Strachey:Landmarks in French literature

a legitimate historical subject

Basements

A column of their own

“Ay me, what act, / That roars so loud, and thunders in the index?”

Judith Shakespeare

the paratextual

transnational conversation

Economic means

Pamphlets

Woolf as "the most brilliant pamphleteer in England (Orlo Williams)

"Three Guineas" as the Book of the Year, hailed in Time and Tide by Theodora Bosanquet

The TLS, 4 June 1938

Florbela

Feminism

Intellectual principles

Room for more

Outside the post- 1970's criticism

metaphor reappropriation

Hilary Owen "a paragraph of their own"

Alternative narratives

Spatial

exteriors

interiors

drawn in and drawn out

memory

the linear

the geographical

globalisation

Fictions
fluid

Slippery text

Gaps

Permeable membrane

free-flow

Inter-penetration of fiction and non-fiction

subjectivities

life writing

writing the self

Discourse

committee discourse
Patriarchal fascism as a men's and women's problem
rhetorical
political
récit (text)
histoire (story)
narration (narration)
historical
literary history

Genealogy

Foucault

historiography
New-Historicism
Network of circulation

non-literary

literary

Canon

Biblical
Testaments
The Apocrypha
legal association
Three Guineas judge
Espanca at law school
transcanonical
transatlantic

"as a woman, my country is the whole world" (Girton lecture)

transcontinental

Dickinson

Clarice

Relationship with New York literary agents

Ambivalence surrounding commercialism

Jacques Chambrun

Ann Watkins

international dialogue

existing across canons and times

escapes genre

narrative as gendered

"Orlando"

Eurocentrism

British domestic patriarchy

European fascism

Voyage as metaphor

the sea
the "see"

sight and the "I"/"eye"

Sontag "illness as metaphor"
Colonialism as cannibalism
the body of the text
Colonialism of both nations
Empire

Empirical

the experimental

stream-of-consciousness

Modernism

Portuguese tradition