A Room of One’s Own is an essay written by Virginia Woolf. It was published in 1929 and is based on two lectures given by the author in 1928 at two colleges for women at Cambridge. In this famous essay, Woolf addressed the status of women, and women artists in particular. In this essay, the author also asserts that a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write. According to Woolf, womens creativity has been curtailed due to centuries of prejudice and financial and educational disadvantages.
To emphasize her view, she offers the example of an imaginary gifted but uneducated sister of William Shakespeare, who, discouraged from all eventually kills herself. Woolf celebrates the work of women who have overcome that tradition and become writers, including Jane Austen, George Eliot, and the Brontë sisters, Anne, Charlotte, and Emily. In the final section Woolf suggests that great minds are neutral and argues that intellectual freedom requires financial freedom. The author entreats her audience to write not only fiction but poetry, criticism, and scholarly works as well.
About the Author
Virginia Woolf was an English writer. On account of their nonlinear approaches to narrative, her novels exerted a major influence. Although, she is best known for her novels, especially Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse, Woolf also wrote pioneering essays on literary history, women’s writing, and the politics of power. Woolf wished to build on her achievement in Mrs. Dalloway by merging the novelistic and elegiac forms.
Woolf also experimented with several forms of biographical writing and composed short fictions. She was writing nearly a review a week in 1918. Her essay “Modern Novels” attacked the “materialists” who wrote about superficial rather than spiritual experiences. In two 1927 essays, The Art of Fiction and The New Biography, she wrote that fiction writers should be less concerned with naive notions of reality and more with language and design.