![]() There was a feeling that she was an aesthetician and an experimentalist, an interesting, sensitive, delicate modernist, experimenting with ‘stream of consciousness’. After she died, in the middle of the Second World War, her reputation-which had been high in her lifetime-rather sank down. Then, it was only twenty-five years since she died. I was a student in Oxford in the mid-sixties. In it you mention that when you were studying English literature as an undergraduate at Oxford University, there weren’t any lectures on Woolf, and as a graduate student, you were told that Woolf was a ‘minor modernist’, not to be classed with the likes of James Joyce, T. Foreign Policy & International Relationsīefore we get to the books, let’s start this discussion by looking at your biography of Virginia Woolf. ![]()
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