Virginia Woolf Hermione Lee
A Room Of One's Own And Three Guineas
A Room Of One's Own And Three Guineas
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Woolf exposes the prejudices and constraints against which women writers struggled for centuries, and argues for a more equal literary establishment With an introduction, plus extensive notes and reference by Hermione Lee. In these texts, Virginia Woolf considers the implications of the historical exclusion of women from education and from economic independence. In A Room of One's Own (1929), she examines the work of past women writers, and looks ahead to a time when women's creativity will not be hampered by poverty, or by oppression. In Three Guineas (1938), however, Woolf argues that women's historical exclusion offers them the chance to form a political and cultural identity which could challenge the drive towards fascism and war.
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