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<p class="MsoNormal">Hello Woolfians<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">One of the benefits of our new online life is that you can attend an event anywhere in the world. With that in mind, I’d like to invite you to a talk on Woolf organized by a research group in Leeds, UK, with a speaker in Germany!<o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class="xmsonormal">Dr Anne Reus (Technische Universität Dresden) will be speaking on ‘Writing Virginia Woolf: Autobiographical Fragments’ for the Leeds Centre for Victorian Studies on
<b>Friday 20<sup>th</sup> November 2020, 1-2 p.m. (UK time) on Microsoft Teams. </b>
Some of you will remember Anne as one of the Co-organizers of the Woolf Conference in 2016. Please see below for an abstract and further information. It’s free - please send me an email (<a href="mailto:j.degay@leedstrinity.ac.uk">j.degay@leedstrinity.ac.uk</a>)
for a link to join.<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="xmsonormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="xmsonormal">Best wishes<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="xmsonormal">Jane<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="xmsonormal"><b><o:p> </o:p></b></p>
<p class="xmsonormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="xmsonormal"><b>Dr Anne Reus, ‘Writing Virginia Woolf: Autobiographical Fragments’
<o:p></o:p></b></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Abstract:<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">This talk explores how Woolf’s autobiographical writing deals with female authorship. In spite of a wealth of materials (letters, diaries, and memoir fragments), Woolf – strikingly, for a writer so attuned to the importance of female biography
– never accounts for her life<span class="apple-converted-space"> </span><i>as a writer</i>. Although<span class="apple-converted-space"> </span><i>A Room of One’s Own</i><span class="apple-converted-space"> </span>and ‘Professions for Women’ can be read as
semi-autobiographical accounts of her own experience as a woman writing, Woolf’s autobiographical fragments, largely written for a more private audience, don’t offer a sustained account of her life past 1910. I argue that these fragments again reflect an ongoing
struggle with the Victorian period; both chronologically in her inability to move beyond it, and in their narrative strategies.<span class="apple-converted-space"> </span><i>Reminiscences</i><span class="apple-converted-space"> </span>(1907) grapples with
exactly those clichéd and euphemistic descriptions of character and family dismissed as the worst excesses of Victorian biography in ‘Memoirs of a Novelist’; while the artistic ambitions and achievements of Vanessa and Virginia remain unspeakable for narrator
and subject alike.<span class="apple-converted-space"> </span><i>A Sketch of the Past</i><span class="apple-converted-space"> </span>in contrast ignores all outward signifiers of professional success but weaves Woolf’s writerly identity into the narrative
to assert that writing was a social and biological destiny. However, Woolf also enacts the ways in which her genetic legacies continue to shape her world socially by encoding her Victorian upbringing as an inheritance of femaleness: positing her identity as
a woman and a writer as equally fundamental, they ultimately remain impossible to reconcile.<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Biography:<o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal">Dr Anne Reus works at the Technische Universität Dresden. Her PhD thesis, Virginia Woolf’s Rewriting of Victorian Women Writers’ Lives, argues for the lasting impact of Victorian biography on Woolf’s representation of nineteenth century
women writers. She was co-organizer of the 26th Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf and Heritage at Leeds Trinity University in 2016, and is co-editor of <i>Virginia Woolf and Heritage</i> (Clemson UP, 2017). She has published on Virginia Woolf
and Margaret Oliphant, and her forthcoming publications include a chapter on women and National Biography in Woolf’s early fiction; an article on visual arts in the works of Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Margaret Oliphant; and a monograph (under contract with
Edinburgh UP): <i>Virginia Woolf and Nineteenth-Century Women Writers: Victorian Legacies and Literary Afterlives.</i> <a name="_GoBack"></a><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
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