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2 - Elusive Encounters: Seeking out Virginia Woolf in Her Commemorative House Museum

from PART ONE - Self and Identity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2016

Nuala Hancock
Affiliation:
Edinburgh University Press
Gill Lowe
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer of English, University Campus Suffolk, School of Arts and Humanities, University Campus Suffolk.
Jeanne Dubino
Affiliation:
Professor of English and Global Studies, Appalachian State University
Kathryn Simpson
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer, Cardiff Metropolitan University
Vara Neverow
Affiliation:
Professor of English and Gender Studies, Southern Connecticut State University
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Summary

Listless is the air in an empty room, just swelling the curtain; the flowers in the jar shift.

One fibre in the wicker armchair creaks, though no one sits there.

Virginia Woolf, Jacob's Room

Writers, of course, live on through their work long after their material demise. Their thoughts and ideas are kept vividly alive through the enduring medium of their words set down on the page. This phenomenon is richly represented in the case of Virginia Woolf, whose work is the subject of perpetual re-discovery and re-interpretation far beyond the chronological or geographical confines of her physical or temporally bound existence. In the twenty-first century, we dialogue with Woolf in a myriad of ways: intellectually, artistically, politically, poetically. Not only are her ideas astonishingly à propos more than seventy years after her death, her very writing style is thrilling and quickening. Reading Virginia Woolf – unfailingly – makes me feel more alive.

Yet however animated or animating a posthumous text, readers who enjoy or are intrigued by a writer's language or ideas are often tempted, it seems, by the possibility of an authorial encounter of a more material kind. The growing number of people undertaking literary pilgrimages, seeking a tangible link with a writer's lived past, is indicative of a desire for an exchange beyond a meeting of minds. Writers die, but the artefacts which they handled, the houses which they inhabited, the contexts in which they set their work, frequently endure. Such physical remnants of another's past offer themselves as possible sources of consolidation or illumination – of a more proximal attunement to the other's life and creative process. Visitors flock to Abbotsford, in pursuit of Scott; to Haworth, in search of the Brontës; to Hampstead and Rome, desirous of a glimpse of Keats.

But an investigation into the intimate sites and the surviving accoutrements of another's lived past is a highly charged affair. Often characterised as recreational and undertaken with a careless sense of ease, visiting a commemorative house has the capacity to enthrall, rather than to entertain; to surprise and disarray, rather than to amuse. Readers and writers customarily encounter one another through the shared forum of the published text, in an intended collaboration, in the immaterial realm of the intellect or the imagination.

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Virginia Woolf
Twenty-First-Century Approaches
, pp. 34 - 48
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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