The History of Literature

735 Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf (with Mark Hussey) | My Last Book with Graham Watson

Sep 22, 2025
Mark Hussey, a Distinguished Professor of English Emeritus and expert on Virginia Woolf, delves into the significance of *Mrs Dalloway* on its centenary. He discusses the novel's vivid stream-of-consciousness, Woolf's struggles, and its revolutionary narrative techniques. Hussey highlights the changing student perspectives on Woolf, especially around themes of PTSD. Literary scholar Graham Watson shares his choice for his last book, *The Diary of Virginia Woolf*, reflecting on its intimacy and profound insights into the author's mind.
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INSIGHT

Feminism Changed Woolf's Readership

  • Feminist criticism of the late 1960s–70s transformed Woolf's reputation and classroom reception.
  • Contemporary students often connect through Septimus's PTSD rather than only Clarissa's social life.
INSIGHT

Maturity Forged Her Modern Voice

  • Woolf reached her distinctive voice around age 40 after Jacob's Room and work at the Hogarth Press.
  • She gained confidence to experiment while accepting she wouldn't be a mass-market novelist.
INSIGHT

The Writer's Fragile Confidence

  • Woolf was sensitive to criticism and compared herself to contemporaries like Joyce and Eliot.
  • Her diary recorded the daily struggle of creative confidence and public reception.
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