Women of Bloomsbury : Virginia, Vanessa, and Carrington

Bibliographic Information

Women of Bloomsbury : Virginia, Vanessa, and Carrington

Mary Ann Caws

Routledge, 1991

  • : pbk

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 211-214

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Three Bloomsbury women: a great writer, a talented painter, and an unsuccessful, reclusive artist. Mary Ann Caws' deeply personal book takes a look at the lives of Virginia Woolf, her sister Vanessa Bell, and Dora Carrington. Connected by more than bonds of friendship and artistic endeavour, the three women faced similar struggles. Caws juxtaposes their personal lives and their work: among these three were two who achieved great renown, two bisexuals, two women artists living with gay men, two suicides. "Women of Bloomsbury" explores the pain women suffer in being artists, and in finding - or creating - their sense of self. Relying on many unpublished sources, including letters and diaries, as well as familiar texts, Caws gives us a portrait of the female self in the act of creation. This book should be of interest to students and teachers of literature and women's studies.

Table of Contents

1. Personal Criticism: A Matter of Choice 2. These Working Women 3. Virginia 4. Together, with Virginia 5. Vanessa 6. Carrington 7. How We See, How We are.

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