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8 - ‘This Moment I Stand On’: Virginia Woolf and the Spaces in Time

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Julia Briggs
Affiliation:
De Montfort University
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Summary

Time … though it makes animals and vegetables bloom and fade with amazing punctuality, has no such simple effect upon the mind of man. The mind of man, moreover, works with equal strangeness upon the body of time. An hour, once it lodges in the queer element of the human spirit, may be stretched to fifty or a hundred times its clock length; on the other hand, an hour may be accurately represented on the time-piece of the mind by one second. This extraordinary discrepancy between time on the clock and time on the mind is less known than it should be and deserves fuller investigation. (O, 68)

Woolf did not require Einstein's theories to legitimate her sense of the relativity of time, the rapid or crawling passage of the hour. As a novelist centrally concerned with how to represent consciousness and subjectivity, she was intensely aware of time, both as an impersonal force and as a personal experience, as shared time and individual time, as the regulated and measurable time of clocks, public and private, and of seasons and stars. She was aware of time's asymmetrical relation to space, and of time in memory and thought, and also within the life of the body, moving from moment to moment towards that final obliteration of consciousness which is death. She was aware of time passed with family, friends or partners, of time as loss, and of time as history, whether personal, familial, cultural, social or political.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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