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Virginia and Woolf
* Fiction writing: Virginia Woolf
* 2000-Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf ( Rochester, NY )
: — Virginia Woolf
In the 20th century she was championed by a new breed of critics, most notably by Virginia Woolf, who called Middlemarch " one of the few English novels written for grown-up people ".
Authors such as Virginia Woolf, D. H. Lawrence, and Joseph Conrad have written works that are Impressionistic in the way that they describe, rather than interpret, the impressions, sensations and emotions that constitute a character's mental life.
* 1882 Virginia Woolf, English writer ( d. 1941 )
In the 20th century, Katherine Mansfield, Amy Lowell, Gertrude Stein, H. D., Vita Sackville-West, Virginia Woolf, and Gale Wilhelm wrote popular works that had same-sex relationships or gender transformations as themes.
Many of the innovations that Sterne introduced, adaptations in form that should be understood as an exploration of what constitutes the novel, were highly influential to Modernist writers like James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, and more contemporary writers such as Thomas Pynchon and David Foster Wallace.
Henri Bergson ( 1859 1941 ), on the other hand, emphasized the difference between scientific, clock time and the direct, subjective, human experience of time His work on time and consciousness " had a great influence on twentieth-century novelists ," especially those modernists who used the stream of consciousness technique, such as Dorothy Richardson, Pointed Roofs, ( 1915 ), James Joyce, Ulysses ( 1922 ) and Virginia Woolf ( 1882 1941 ) Mrs Dalloway ( 1925 ), To the Lighthouse ( 1927 ).
It appeared in Europe in such critical movements as Dada and then in constructive movements such as surrealism, as well as in smaller movements such as the Bloomsbury Group, which included British novelists Virginia Woolf and E. M. Forster.
Significant modernist literary works continued to be created in the 1920s and 1930s, including further novels by Marcel Proust, Virginia Woolf, Robert Musil, and Dorothy Richardson.
* Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Virginia Woolf used it, citing Thackeray, in her 1929 essay A Room of One's Own.
Notable practitioners of elegiac poetry have included Propertius, Jorge Manrique, Jan Kochanowski, Chidiock Tichborne, Edmund Spenser, Ben Jonson, John Milton, Thomas Gray, Charlotte Turner Smith, William Cullen Bryant, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Evgeny Baratynsky, Alfred Tennyson, Walt Whitman, Louis Gallet, Antonio Machado, Juan Ramón Jiménez, William Butler Yeats, Rainer Maria Rilke, and Virginia Woolf.
" Ring Lardner thought of himself as primarily a sports columnist whose stuff wasn't destined to last, and he held to that absurd belief even after his first masterpiece, You Know Me Al, was published in 1916 and earned the awed appreciation of Virginia Woolf, among other very serious, unfunny people ", wrote Andrew Ferguson, who named it, in a Wall Street Journal article, one of the top five pieces of American humor writing.
" In her much reprinted essay " Science Fiction and Mrs Brown ," the science fiction writer Ursula K. Le Guin has approached an answer by first citing the essay written by the English author Virginia Woolf entitled " Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown " in which she states:
Short stories by Virginia Woolf are " Kew Gardens " ( 1919 ) and " Solid Objects ," about a politician with mental problems.
* Thoby Stephen, elder brother of novelist Virginia Woolf, died of typhoid fever in 1906 at age 26.
Tolkien, by science fiction writers like Philip K. Dick, by central figures of Western literature like Leo Tolstoy, Virgil and The Brontë sisters, and including feminist writers like Virginia Woolf, by children's literature like Alice in Wonderland, The Wind in the Willows and The Jungle Book, by Norse mythology, and by books from the Eastern tradition such as the Tao Te Ching.
The studio's 1966 film Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?
** Virginia Woolf, English writer ( b. 1882 )
* October 13 Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
* January 25 Virginia Woolf, English writer ( d. 1941 )
* May 5 The novel To the Lighthouse was finished by Virginia Woolf.
Among Keynes's Bloomsbury friends, Lopokova was, at least initially, subjected to criticism for her manners, mode of conversation and supposedly humble social origins the latter of the ostensible causes being particularly noted in the letters of Vanessa and Clive Bell, and Virginia Woolf.

Virginia and 1882
One of his University of Virginia classmates, Edward Ireland Renick, invited him to join his new law practice as partner and Wilson joined him in May 1882.
* Peyton's History of Augusta County, Virginia ( 1882 ), searchable online edition of the 1882 edition by J. Lewis Peyton.
In the late nineteenth century, the biracial state legislature established the first state-supported black college, founded here in 1882 as Virginia Normal and Collegiate Institute ( now Virginia State University ).
* John Mercer Langston, first president of Virginia State University in 1882 and US Congressman from Virginia
* Peter Bouck Borst ( 23 June 1826 24 April 1882 ) was an active participant in the mid-19th century development of Page County, Virginia, serving as a lawyer, county delegate to Virginia's Secession Convention of 1861, and president of the Shenandoah Valley Railroad.
* Virginia ( 1882 1941 ) married Leonard Woolf
It was followed by the " English Scholar's Library " ( 16 volumes ) which included the Works ( 1884 ) of Captain John Smith, governor of Virginia, and the Poems ( 1882 ) of Richard Barnfield.
Dent had been in practice for six years when he was convicted under an 1882 West Virginia law which required physicians to hold a degree from a reputable medical college, pass an examination, or prove practice in West Virginia for the previous ten years.
He married Virginia Salinas in 1882, and the couple had two daughters.
Wilmer McLean ( May 3, 1814 June 5, 1882 ) was a wholesale grocer from Virginia.
* Virginia Woolf ( 1882 1941 ), British writer, and her sister Vanessa Bell ( 1879 1961 ), painter and interior designer, lived at 22 Hyde Park Gate until 1904.
In 1882, the Virginia Normal and Collegiate Institute at Ettrick was established.
Wilson was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1880 and was chosen as president of West Virginia University, taking office on September 4, 1882.
Virginia donated the land to the Federal Government in 1882.
Stuart served as rector of the University of Virginia from 1874 to 1882 and also as president of the Virginia Historical Society, as well as continuing with the practice of law.
After his death in 1882, she remarried and was known as Virginia Clay-Clopton.

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