PARALLEL PLOTLINES:VIRGINIA WOOLF AND FLORBELA ESPANCA ON THE TRANSCANONICAL MAP
Voyage as metaphor
Portuguese tradition
Colonialism of both nations
Empire
Empirical
the experimental
Modernism
stream-of-consciousness
Colonialism as cannibalism
the body of the text
Sontag "illness as metaphor"
the sea
the "see"
sight and the "I"/"eye"
Canon
transcanonical
existing across canons and times
Eurocentrism
European fascism
British domestic patriarchy
"Orlando"
escapes genre
narrative as gendered
transatlantic
international dialogue
Relationship with New York literary agents
Ann Watkins
Jacques Chambrun
Ambivalence surrounding commercialism
transcontinental
Clarice
Dickinson
"as a woman, my country is the whole world" (Girton lecture)
legal association
Espanca at law school
Three Guineas judge
Biblical
The Apocrypha
Testaments
Discourse
New-Historicism
Network of circulation
literary
non-literary
historical
historiography
literary history
Genealogy
Foucault
narration (narration)
histoire (story)
récit (text)
political
rhetorical
committee discourse
Patriarchal fascism as a men's and women's problem
Plotlines
Fictions
fluid
subjectivities
life writing
writing the self
Slippery text
Gaps
Permeable membrane
free-flow
Inter-penetration of fiction and non-fiction
Cartography
the linear
the geographical
globalisation
location
Loci
memory
rooms
A Room of One's Own
Spatial
interiors
drawn in and drawn out
exteriors
Room for more
Outside the post- 1970's criticism
metaphor reappropriation
Hilary Owen "a paragraph of their own"
Alternative narratives
Intellectual principles
Feminism
The Hogarth Press
Pamphlets
Florbela
Woolf as "the most brilliant pamphleteer in England (Orlo Williams)
The TLS, 4 June 1938
"Three Guineas" as the Book of the Year, hailed in Time and Tide by Theodora Bosanquet
Economic means
transnational conversation
the paratextual
Basements
A column of their own
“Ay me, what act, / That roars so loud, and thunders in the index?”
Judith Shakespeare
a legitimate historical subject
1917
D.H Lawrence: Studies in Classic American Literature
Lytton Strachey:Landmarks in French literature
the backroom studio
double acts
John Lehmann
Sequels- Three Guineas
stanzas
Florbela's sonnets
Form
"domestic architecture"
"The Open Door"/"Opening the Door"/ "A Tap on the Door" as provisional titles for "Three Guineas"
Aesthetics of transgression
Parallel
alongside one another
Anglo-american tradition of literary criticism
"The room next door"
Norah Nicholls
the interwar female professional
complementary textualities
alternatives in "parallelos"
corpus
experiences as a body
Woman
Female identity