Woolf Handout
English 202
Dr. Fike
- Does the opening violate expectations? How does it
differ from conventional openings? Who is Woolf’s audience? Why is the book
partly fictional?
- Why does the essay start with the word “But”?
- How do men write? What is the convention that lectures,
most of them by men, follow? Do we get a “nugget” from Woolf?
- What does par. 1 set out as the focus/purpose of the
essay?
- What does she count on the reader/listener to do?
- What two locations will she describe? How are the names
significant?
- What do you make of the name Woolf assumes?
- What metaphor does she use for a thought? What happens
to it in par. 3? Why?
- Whom does she encounter in par. 4? What seems odd about
this encounter?
- In par. 5, does she seem angry? Cf. par. 16.
- In par. 5, how does she digress?
- What conclusion is she moving toward at the end of par.
5?
- What male convention is identified in par. 6, and what
female convention does she introduce?
- Consider the excerpts from Tennyson and Christina
Rossetti: what are the differences between them?
- What is the purpose of the Manx cat? What relationship
does this image have to WWI?
- What is she talking about in par. 12? And what point
can you make about her missing the turn to Fernham? See also page 38 top.
- Why the apparent change of seasons in par. 13? Whom
does she now encounter? Different from the Beadle?
- How is the meal at Fernham different from the one at
Oxbridge? And what’s up with that?
- What points about money does she make in par. 16?
- In par. 19, does she make good on her promise to let
readers make their own conclusions?
- In Chapter Two, what does Woolf say about the
relationship between men and women? What is the source of this attitude?
- What has saved the speaker from the fate of the average
woman?
- Consider page 40: "Moreover, in a hundred years, I
thought,…women will have ceased to be the protected sex. Logically they will
take part in all the activities and exertions that were once denied them." Is
she right?
- What does Chapter Three say about the situation of women
in Elizabethan England? Is Woolf exaggerating?
- Comment on Woolf's description of Shakespeare's sister.
- Is it clear why Woolf thinks that women need money and a
room of their own?
- How does Woolf account for Shakespeare's greatness on
pages 56-57?
- Why was the novel a favorite form for women writers?
(67, 71, 77)
- How are women novelists limited? (70-71)
- What does Woolf have to say about Jane Eyre?
(73)
- How is the novel a "fitting receptacle" for men who wish
to write about women? (83)
- What image do we get on 96 (Chapter 6, par. 2), and what
does it suggest? Cp. the fish in Chapter One.
- What is an androgynous mind, and what does Woolf mean by
“man-womanly” and “woman-manly”? (98, 104)
- Which male writers have androgynous minds? (98, 103)
- Is it really true that women and men have different
writing styles? Is Woolf right or wrong? (99)
- According to Woolf, what characterizes men's writing?
(99-101)
- Does Woolf blame one sex over the other? (103)
- What’s the irony of the point Woolf makes?
- How does Woolf respond to the following two criticisms?
- Page 105: "No opinion has been expressed, you may
say, upon the comparative merits of the sexes even as writers."
- Page 106: "Next I think that you may object that in
all this I have made too much of the importance of material things."
- How and why is Woolf’s style different in this section?
- Discuss the following chart:
Female
Male
Right brain
Left brain
Induction
Deduction
Process
Product
Concrete
Abstract