A Room of One's Own

by Virginia Woolf
A Room of One's Own  
published December 27th 1989 by Harvest Books
first published 1929
binding Paperback
isbn 0156787334   (isbn13: 9780156787338)
pages 132
description Surprisingly, this long essay about society and art and sexism is one of Woolf's most accessible works. Woolf, a major modernist writer and critic, ta...more
date added
03-14-07



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An essay for the ages. 1 02/05/2008 06:48AM

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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4601)



Trevor
01/02/08

There are so many books that one ‘just knows’ what they are going to be about. I have always ‘known’ about this book and ‘knew’ what it would be about. Feminist rant, right? Oh, these people do so preach to the choir, don’t they? Why do they hate men so much? In the end they are no different to the male chauvinists they are attacking. Why can’t they just be more even handed?

That none of this is the case, of course, does not matter at all, because reiterating received wisdom s...more
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Kelly
05/29/08

bookshelves: brit-lit, favorites, fiction, worth-rereading
Every woman should read this. Yes, everyone who told me that, you were absolutely right. Its short, it reads fast, and it completely revitalizes your outlook on life. How many 113 page books and/or hour long lectures (the original format of this text) can say that?

This is Woolf's "Fuck the patriarchy," book, but it is of course done in an overtly polite, very British way- all the while sticking it to them behind their backs until she brings up her fountain pen and stabs them right ...more
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Kristen
bookshelves: feminism
I'm read this for May's dangerous challenge. Even though I finished it yesterday, I still can't decide how I feel about it.

On one hand, it was very poignant and ahead of its time. Written in 1928, the book is a combination of lectures given by Woolf about art, fiction, intellectualism and sexism. In particular, I enjoyed her discussion about who controls "knowledge" and who has access to it. Her observations were true then and still ring correct today. I also enjoyed how applicabl...more
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Jamie
07/02/08

bookshelves: senior-year, virginia-woolf
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: everyone, feminists, woolf fans
An incredibly fascinating and illuminating text from one of the greatest writers of our time (and ever). I've read Mrs. Dalloway, and got through most of Jacob's Room and Orlando. I'm taking a Woolf seminar in the fall, and decided to brush up on my Woolf over the summer. This is in a very big sense quite different from Woolf's novels; where her novels are dense and difficult (but of course, undeniably invaluable), A Room of One's Own is accessible but still stunningly written. I think one o...more
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Mariam
03/27/08

Read in March, 2008
I had written Virginia Woolf off, rashly and impulsively, after having attempted to read Mrs. Dalloway and finding the stream-of-consciousness style bothersome, as I have historically found it to my tastes. I read this book in order to inform something I was writing, and was pleasantly surprised by how lyrical and enjoyable this was as a read, and how engaging, given the subject matter. What was, written in her time, a seminal piece of work can be judged by today’s standards as merely intuit...more
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Courtney
Courtney rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/01/08

Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: writers, especially women writers, looking for inspiration
Virginia Woolf's short and meandering examination of women and fiction asks and attempts to answer two basic questions: Why have so few great works of literature, poetry and history been written by women? And what should women do now?

The answer to the first question, it seems, is that women have always been poor and oppressed, and Woolf bolsters this argument well with evidence. At the time of her writing, women had owned property and obtained educations for only a few decades, had been all...more
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Carrie
07/07/08

Read in June, 2004
recommends it for: independent women
A Room of One's Own is an extended essay by Virginia Woolf. First published during 1929, it was based on a series of lectures she delivered at two women's colleges at Cambridge University in 1928. I imagine that it owuld have been better as a lecture~ but the notes are still interesting and many point are still valied 70 years later.

The title comes from Woolf's conception that, 'a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction'. It also refers to any author's need fo...more
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Jensen
02/04/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in January, 2008
I decided to read this book after we started learning about modernism in class to get a taste for the style. This book is more like an essay than a novel; it is a stream of consciousness in which Woolf explores the nature of the relationship and history between women and fiction. Boring as that may sound, Woolf actually makes some very interesting arguments. Drawing on historical evidence and personal musings for support, Woolf argues that women can only have the power to write fiction when they...more
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Cathy
05/22/08

Read in May, 2008
recommends it for: Tia Smith
I'm not sure how I got to be this old without reading A Room of One's Own. But in a way, I have read it before, because the arguments Woolf made in 1928 form the foundation of most feminist intellectual thought. But I think if I'd read this book in my twenties or early thirties, it wouldn't have made the impact it made this time. I think this quotation from Woolf is very interesting: "Where books are concerned, it is notoriously difficult to fix labels of merit in such a way that they do n...more
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Cat
06/17/08

Read in June, 2008
I really need to read Virginia Woolf out loud. Her sentence structures are so complicated that I sometimes get lost when I read silently for too long.

But I still liked this essay. Woolf uses a great deal of humor to make her point that there is a lack of women in fiction throughout history because there was a lack of encouragement for women to read and write and grow as individuals.

At the time of this essay, 1929, women were just beginning to establish a foothold in the literary worl...more
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Ginnie
12/03/07

bookshelves: literature, women
This story grew out of a lecture that Virginia Woolf had been invited to give at Girton College, Cambridge in 1928. It ranges over Jane Austen and Charlotte Bronte, the silent fate of Shakespeare's gifted and imaginary sister, and over the effects of poverty and chastity on female creativity.

I seem to recall British actress Eileen Atkins doing a one-woman production of this on PBS and it was very fine -- I couldn't wait to get my hands on the text and read it for myself.

LATER - I was mot...more
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Andrea
06/06/08

Read in June, 2008
Written to women writers, Virginia talks about the reasons women have not written before her time. She says that 1. they needed an example or tradition to follow, 2. they needed money to remain independent of men and the traditional women's role and 3. they needed a room with a lock on it or the power to think for themselves. Feminists have taken her opinions and worked hard to "liberate" women. However I think there are examples of strong women who lived before Virginia's day who...more
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Jennifer
Jennifer rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
04/25/07

Read in February, 2007
recommends it for: Lit Nerds

I freely admit that this is the first of Woolf's writing that I've read, and I have to say – I really enjoyed it. It was the first bit of what I feel was more "academic" reading I've done this year. It definitely reminded me of the 19th and 20th century literature classes I've taken, and seeing as I have a definite interest in women's writing and the ability (or inability) to do so because of cultural climate is one of my favorite things to study. Woolf has some ideas that I think ...more
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Molly
03/09/07

Read in October, 2005
recommends it for: no one
This book is absolutely infuriating!!! (Note the 3 exclamation marks.) Woolf claims that all a woman needs to write is a room and a fixed income. That's not the infuriating part. She goes on to attack all of her fellow female writers, claiming that their opinions about the opposite sex wrecked their novels--that these women (her comments on Bronte were especially enraging) wrote from anger or other emotions and didn't allow the true nature of their characters to come through. Being a writer i...more
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Will
01/05/08

Brilliantly crafted essay with evocative poetic interludes. A Room of One's Own is often read through the eyes of "history" -- as a precursor to contemporary identity politics. However, without shortchanging its historical importance, Woolf's arguments are still very much valuable in themselves. (I was especially struck by how focused Woolf is upon the question of aesthetic value, which has become a taboo topic in literary studies.) She approaches her essay with a scope and freshne...more
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Emily
01/20/08

Read in January, 2008
One of those classic essays that I should have read a long time ago, but of course one can never read absolutely everything that one should read.

Woolf's argumentative strategy is very different from standard Western philosophical argumentation. One the surface it meanders and goes out on tangents, and yet her arguments are uncommonly powerful. They possess more power than standard Western philosophical argumentation because they are grounded and because her prose is vivid. As I read through, ...more
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Kimberly
Read in July, 2002
I read this book one summer when I was living in an apartment, on my own, and though it didn't do much to inspire skilled writing from me, it made me appreciate that time and space that I was inhabiting, to cherish the solitude. Simultaneously, this book has had a huge impact on my personal ideas and philosophy. The whole premise is that we cannot measure the abilities of women based on their current status. It's because we were silenced for so many years, left out of histories because we wer...more
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Zahira
03/04/08

bookshelves: feminist-womanist
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in March, 2008
Begins with a first hand account of being rejected from entering a library and being a woman attendee at a writing workshop, truly sidelined. Progresses into a critique of intergenerational disregard for women and segues into an interesting hybridized portrait of a Professor X, a misogynist who uses his male-power to make misogyny scientific, literary, dispensible to the masses. Then it traverses into a multicentury analysis of the presence (or non-presence) of predominantly British female wri...more
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Kirstie
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: feminists and those interested in the history of female writers.
I've always thought that Virginia Woolf was really underrated. This is much different than reading her fiction such as in To The Lighthouse and Orlando because it's a nonfiction examination of many female writers such as Charlotte Bronte and Jane Austen. It supposes how difficult writing was for women in the 1800s and earlier as well as how female writers were perceived. It's a really good landmark to show how far women have come through the years. However, Woolf misses the mark in some wa...more
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Julie
02/15/08

Read in February, 2008
"For masterpieces are not single and solitary births; they are the outcome of many years of thinking in common, of thinking by the body of the people, so that the experience of the mass is behind the single voice."
Virginia Woolf
I openly admit to marking my library's copy of this book. Tempting insights and descriptive one liners made me do it. I am pleased to announce that I am no longer afraid of Virginia Woolf.
Four star rating if read for leisure.
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 4.03 (3856 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.01 (967 ratings)
number of reviews: 225






other editions

A Room of One's Own (Penguin Modern Classics)
A Room of One's Own (Bloomsbury Classic)