Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History

Virginia Woolf’s relationship with her early-modern predecessors is now a well-established field of study. As Juliet Dusinberre argues, with the Renaissance Woolf “connected herself with a life which included her own rebirth as writer and reader through the recovery of female forebears”; the period...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anne Besnault
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2024-12-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/16394
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832578483960676352
author Anne Besnault
author_facet Anne Besnault
author_sort Anne Besnault
collection DOAJ
description Virginia Woolf’s relationship with her early-modern predecessors is now a well-established field of study. As Juliet Dusinberre argues, with the Renaissance Woolf “connected herself with a life which included her own rebirth as writer and reader through the recovery of female forebears”; the period was also a laboratory of her revolt against Victorian patriarchy. It is this very notion of rebirth that Woolf rewrites in her drafted essay “Anon,” the unfinished chapter of her “Common History Book” that she left in the form of an incompletely revised typescript in 1940 and that was posthumously published. In the months preceding her death, the Second World War was putting all ideas of renewal at bay: to rewrite Britain’s cultural history, whether in the form of a play-poem with Between the Acts (1940) or in the form of a critical literary history had become an urgent act of hope in the midst of despair. That Woolf sees the “Renaissance” in “Anon” as a breaking point is obvious; that she sees it as the promise of a democratic future celebrating the origins of the notion of “novelty” and the birth of a national culture is less evident. The aim of this article is to examine the symbolic murder that Woolf stages in her essay, that of Anon, the anonymous female or male poet, by the invention of the printing press, while reading in context Woolf’s counter-narrative grounded in a singular, historiographical cycle of life and death.
format Article
id doaj-art-2108998ad39943d4937e99d63232dabf
institution Kabale University
issn 1272-3819
1969-6302
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"
record_format Article
series Sillages Critiques
spelling doaj-art-2108998ad39943d4937e99d63232dabf2025-01-30T13:48:26ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022024-12-013710.4000/13195Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-HistoryAnne BesnaultVirginia Woolf’s relationship with her early-modern predecessors is now a well-established field of study. As Juliet Dusinberre argues, with the Renaissance Woolf “connected herself with a life which included her own rebirth as writer and reader through the recovery of female forebears”; the period was also a laboratory of her revolt against Victorian patriarchy. It is this very notion of rebirth that Woolf rewrites in her drafted essay “Anon,” the unfinished chapter of her “Common History Book” that she left in the form of an incompletely revised typescript in 1940 and that was posthumously published. In the months preceding her death, the Second World War was putting all ideas of renewal at bay: to rewrite Britain’s cultural history, whether in the form of a play-poem with Between the Acts (1940) or in the form of a critical literary history had become an urgent act of hope in the midst of despair. That Woolf sees the “Renaissance” in “Anon” as a breaking point is obvious; that she sees it as the promise of a democratic future celebrating the origins of the notion of “novelty” and the birth of a national culture is less evident. The aim of this article is to examine the symbolic murder that Woolf stages in her essay, that of Anon, the anonymous female or male poet, by the invention of the printing press, while reading in context Woolf’s counter-narrative grounded in a singular, historiographical cycle of life and death.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/16394RenaissanceModernismMiddle AgesWoolf (Virginia)renewalliterary history
spellingShingle Anne Besnault
Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History
Sillages Critiques
Renaissance
Modernism
Middle Ages
Woolf (Virginia)
renewal
literary history
title Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History
title_full Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History
title_fullStr Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History
title_full_unstemmed Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History
title_short Virginia Woolf’s “Modernist Renaissance” in “Anon”: A Singular Counter-History
title_sort virginia woolf s modernist renaissance in anon a singular counter history
topic Renaissance
Modernism
Middle Ages
Woolf (Virginia)
renewal
literary history
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/16394
work_keys_str_mv AT annebesnault virginiawoolfsmodernistrenaissanceinanonasingularcounterhistory