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“Passage to China : East and West and Woolf” (Publication, 1996)

Year

1996

Text

Cuddy-Keane, Melba ; Li, Kay. Passage to China : East and West and Woolf. In : The South Carolina review ; vol. 29, no 1 (1996).
http://www.clemson.edu/cedp/cudp/scr/articles/scr_29-1_keane_Li.pdf. (Woolf71)

Type

Publication

Contributors (1)

Cuddy-Keane, Melba  (um 1996) : Professor Department of English, University of Toronto, Scarborough

Mentioned People (1)

Woolf, Virginia  (London 1882-1941 Rodmell bei Lewes, Sussex, Selbstmord) : Schriftstellerin, Verlegerin

Subjects

Literature : Occident : Great Britain / References / Sources

Chronology Entries (2)

# Year Text Linked Data
1 1988 Zhang, Feng. De Wu'erfu 'Dai luo wei fu ren' de yi shu zheng ti gan yu yi shi liu xiao shuo jie gou [ID D31616].
Zhang focuses on the technique of stream of consciousness, but instead of relating Woolf's style to concepts of character complexity and multiple perspective, he is interested in the implications of stream of consciousness for the creation and reception of the work of art. Going beyond an explanation of Woolf's style also enables a creative enactment of the artist's emotion – de-personalized and fused with the feelings of her characters. In addistion, Zhang suggests that Woolf's style, by matching the psychological process of human aesthetic response, enables readers to recreate, according to their own experience, the novel's emotion. Stream of consciousness becomes the vehicle for the 'inexpressible internal emotion' that is the 'complete image' of the novel ; it is also the means of communication and connection between writer and reader. For Zhang, the aesthetic response includes the poeti and emotional and such dimensions are evident not only in what interests her in Woolf's writing but also in the way Zhang writes herself.
2 1988 Wu'erfu yan jiu. Qu Shijing bian xuan. [ID D31602].
Forward : Qu locates Woolf's writing in the third of five stages in the development oft he English novel : in 'Music, Art, Literature', and in 'Woolf, Stream of Consciousness, Comprehensive Art'. He suggests that stream of consciousness leads to an understanding not only of Western literature but of Western poetry, painting, music and film as well.
Qu refers to E.M. Forster's comment, "Our debt to her is in part this : she reminds us of the importance of sensation".

Sources (1)

# Year Bibliographical Data Type / Abbreviation Linked Data
1 1988 Zhang, Feng. De Wu'erfu 'Dai luo wei fu ren' de yi shu zheng ti gan yu yi shi liu xiao shuo jie gou. In : Wai guo wen xue ping lun ; vol. 5 (1988). [Artistic unity and stream of consciousness in 'Mrs. Dalloway']. [Betr. Virginia Woolf].
的吴尔夫黛洛维夫人的艺术整体感与意识流小说结构
Publication / Woolf72