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6 - Gendered Strategies of Time and Memory in the Writing of Julian of Norwich and the Recluse of Winchester

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2023

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Summary

In the second section of her modernist novel, To the Lighthouse, Virginia Woolf documents the slow decay of the Ramsay family’s abandoned holiday home during the course of the First World War, a decay that unfolds imperceptibly in its cold solitariness. Both unseen and unheard, the slow deterioration takes on its own temporal and spatial dynamics:

But slumber and sleep though it might there came later in the summer ominous sounds like the measured blows of hammers dulled on felt, which, with their repeated shocks still further loosened the shawl and cracked the tea-cups. Now and again some glass tinkled in the cupboard as if a giant voice had shrieked so loud in its agony that tumblers stood inside a cupboard vibrated too. Then again silence fell; and then, night after night, and sometimes in plain mid-day when the roses were bright and light turned on the wall its shape clearly there seemed to drop into this silence this indifference, this integrity, the thud of something falling.

In this section, entitled ‘Time Passes’, the so-called march of time is visible and measurable only in terms of a vacated and exilic space along with its disintegrating objects: rhythms of sounds and silences, slumber, sleep and waking, the returning movement of the sun on the roses of the wallpaper and catching the folds of the dust-ridden, long-forgotten shawl. Whilst outside in the world at large time is measured in battles and bloodshed, in winning and losing and, ultimately, in living or dying, within this abandoned domestic space, it is all but invisible; in the words of Henri Lefebvre:

[Time is] no longer visible to us, no longer intelligible. It cannot be constructed. It is consumed, exhausted, and that is all. It leaves no traces. It is concealed in space, hidden under a pile of debris to be disposed of as soon as possible.

Here, Lefebvre could well be writing about Woolf’s configuration of a now that incorporates a lost past, a meaningless present and a hopeless future all swept up in the materiality of a left domestic space from which the world is now exiled: for Lefebvre, time finds itself ‘inscribed in space’, and, in turn, space becomes ‘the lyrical and tragic script of natural time’.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2015

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