Published in 1922, the same year as Ulysses and The Waste Land, Jacob’s Room is Virginia Woolf’s own modernist manifesto. Ostensibly a study of a young man’s life on the eve of the Great War, it is really a bomb thrown into the world of the conventional novel, as she attempts to capture the richness and randomness of life’s encounters. Jacob Flanders is a mere point of contact between a crowd of people, appearing and disappearing in a tableau in which all is flux, without certainty and without a controlling viewpoint. But it seems that the author could not maintain this rigorous impersonality, and the radical technique breaks down, so that we finally see Jacob as a person, just as his world is blown apart.
A Room of One’s Own
Virginia Woolf
audiobookbookTo the Lighthouse
Virginia Woolf
audiobookbookA Room of One's Own
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audiobookbookEin Haus mit vielen Zimmern : Autorinnen erzählen vom Schreiben
Margaret Atwood, Tania Blixen, Janet Frame, Nora Gomringer, Siri Hustvedt, Tove Jansson, Clarice Lispector, Annette Pehnt, Sylvia Plath, Judith Schalansky, Anna Seghers, Ali Smith, Antje Rávic Strubel, Virginia Woolf
bookMrs. Dalloway
Virginia Woolf
audiobookTierras sin palabras : Ensayos sobre arte, pintura y cine
Virginia Woolf
bookA Room of One's Own
Virginia Woolf
audiobookbookTogether and Apart
Virginia Woolf
bookThe Introduction
Virginia Woolf
bookThe Widow and the Parrot
Virginia Woolf
bookThe Shooting Party
Virginia Woolf
bookThe New Dress
Virginia Woolf
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