A room of one's own:/ Virginia Woolf
Material type: TextPublication details: New Delhi: Fingerprint classics, 1929. Description: 120p. softbound 12*19 cmISBN: 978-81-7599-415-7DDC classification: 824.912
Contents:
Virginia Woolf's essay A Room of One's Own is a landmark of twentieth-century feminist thought. It explores the history of women in literature through an unconventional and highly provocative investigation of the social and material conditions required for the writing of literature. These conditions—leisure time, privacy, and financial independence— underwrite all literary production, but they are particularly relevant to understanding the situation of women in the literary tradition because women, historically, have been uniformly deprived of those basic prerequisites.
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Tetso College Library English Literature | Non-fiction | 824.912 WOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 13465 | |
Books | Tetso College Library English Literature | Non-fiction | 824.912 WOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 13466 | |
Books | Tetso College Library English Literature | Non-fiction | 824.912 WOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 13467 | |
Books | Tetso College Library Education | Non-fiction | 824.912 WOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 13468 | |
Books | Tetso College Library English Literature | Non-fiction | 824.912 WOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 13469 |
Browsing Tetso College Library shelves, Shelving location: English Literature, Collection: Non-fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
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824.81 QUI The Confessions of an English opium-Eater / | 824.912 WOO A room of one's own:/ | 824.912 WOO A room of one's own:/ | 824.912 WOO A room of one's own:/ | 824.912 WOO A room of one's own:/ | 824.92 BAG Essays for the New Generation / | 827.912 JER Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow: |
Virginia Woolf's essay A Room of One's Own is a landmark of twentieth-century feminist thought. It explores the history of women in literature through an unconventional and highly provocative investigation of the social and material conditions required for the writing of literature. These conditions—leisure time, privacy, and financial independence— underwrite all literary production, but they are particularly relevant to understanding the situation of women in the literary tradition because women, historically, have been uniformly deprived of those basic prerequisites.
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