
Past Present Future History of Ideas 4: Virginia Woolf
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Dec 28, 2023 Virginia Woolf, known for her essay 'A Room of One's Own,' discusses anger, power, sex, modernity, independence, and transcendence. The podcast explores the humor and gender bias in her essay, reflects on women's experiences in Oxbridge, and explores the unequal distribution of wealth and opportunities. It also examines Shakespeare's privilege and the challenges faced by women writers in breaking free from societal limitations, emphasizing the importance of having a personal space for expression.
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Shakespeare and Circumstance
- Even exceptionally gifted individuals like Shakespeare are products of their circumstances.
- Woolf uses the hypothetical "Shakespeare's sister" to illustrate how social barriers limit women's potential.
Contempt and the Catch-22
- Men who escape disadvantaged circumstances, like Dickens, receive praise, unlike women.
- Contempt grows for women who achieve success, creating a catch-22 where they can neither ignore nor address it.
The Absence of Women's Writing
- Women writers face a unique challenge: a lack of a substantial body of prior women's writing to build upon.
- They must transcend silence, unlike male writers who build on a vast literary tradition.
