A Room of One's Own. Virginia Woolf

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Letters from a Stoic: The Ancient Classic

      by Seneca (978‐1‐119‐75135‐9)

      The Feminist Classic

      VIRGINIA WOOLF

      With an Introduction by

      JESSICA GILDERSLEEVE

      This Capstone edition first published 2021

      Introduction copyright © Jessica Gildersleeve

      The first edition of A Room of One's Own was published by Hogarth Press in 1929.

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       BY JESSICA GILDERSLEEVE

      ‘But, you may say, we asked you to speak about women and fiction – what has that got to do with a room of one's own? I will try to explain.’

      With this rhetorical flourish Virginia Woolf begins A Room of One's Own (1929). The first word of the essay, ‘But,’ anticipates immediate argument from her imagined reader, the student audience watching her deliver it, and the university administrator who has commissioned the work. ‘A room of one's own?’ these audiences think. ‘Why? How is it relevant?’ Woolf's essay proceeds to explain: the ‘room’ is not a minor detail, but foundational for women's financial and social independence, and essential for the female writer.

      Photograph of Virginia Woolf, 1927.Virginia Woolf, 1927. Photographer unknown.

      The question of a woman having a room of her own in which to work and write is as pertinent today as it was almost a century ago.

      Woolf's book‐length essay began as a series of lectures she delivered to female students at the University of Cambridge year prior to publication. Its central premise and title has entered the popular lexicon: former Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard's podcast, A Podcast of One's Own, takes its lead from the essay, as does Anonymous Was A Woman, a prominent arts funding body based in New York. A 1980s pop rock group, Shakespears Sister (sic), took its name from The Smiths song Shakespeare's Sister, Morrissey's reflection on Woolf's idea that if the Bard had had a sister of equal genius, she would not have been given the opportunity to express it. Even the Bechdel–Wallace test, which measures the success of a narrative according to whether it features at least two named women, conversing about something other than a man, can be seen to descend from the ‘Chloe liked Olivia’ section of A Room of One's Own. In the imagined novel Woolf references, Chloe and Olivia not only like one another, but their conversation and lives exist outside of any male or patriarchal identification. Finally, Woolf's observation of women as a kind of underclass, in which their work is not recompensed at the same rate as work by men, still holds relevance in relation to today's gender pay gaps – as does the hierarchy of value placed on men's over women's writing, which has led to the necessary establishment of awards like the Women's Prize for Fiction in the United Kingdom and the Stella Prize in Australia.

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