[Vwoolf] Michael Cunningham attempts to explain Woolf's importance: "Mom is adoring and nurturing and ever-so-slightly out of touch."

Jillian Clare j.clare at qut.edu.au
Thu Jul 18 20:48:08 EDT 2013


Yes!
One word .....
Orlando!

'Mom(?) and Dad'! Gimme a break.

He is so full of himself. Pity he gets so much airplay. As Ben J said, "Language most shows the man. Speak so that I may see thee."
Too true. We see! And all too painfully. But the fact that he's now judging others is very depressing. Maybe the Guardian needs 'to see' too?

Regards and thankyou for the most generous gift Vara.
Jillian




On 19/07/2013, at 5:12 AM, "Jean" <millsj7 at gmail.com<mailto:millsj7 at gmail.com>> wrote:

Agreed! And what's this Woolf "could not, would not write about sex" b.s?? Then, why am I so turned on by her books? :/

Jean Mills


Sent from my iPhone


On Jul 18, 2013, at 11:29 AM, Jean Mallinson <annaj at telus.net<mailto:annaj at telus.net>> wrote:

This is a banal piece, which only confirms my opinion of Cunningham. I intensely disliked The Hours and was bewildered by its popularity with critics and readers.
Jean Mallinson
On 7/18/2013 4:52 AM, Christine Froula wrote:
That's indeed "more than enough out of [Cunningham]." Not worthy of the Guardian either, I'd have thought.

On 7/18/2013 5:46 AM, Gregory Jordan Dekter wrote:
From The Guardian Books Blog, July 16: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2013/jul/16/michael-cunningham-folio-joyce-woolf

Forgetting the cliched gender analogy, this article isn't doing Woolf or Joyce any favours. Cunningham seems overly focused on personal traits which 1) he doesn't even support and 2) he twists the meaning of to be sensational. What about facilitating a discussion on the importance of these works, instead of baseless (and ultimately uninteresting) claims about their authors?

Also: "Woolf, in To the Lighthouse, is Winnicott's good-enough mother, the one who's able to love her children while simultaneously urging them towards lives of their own, beyond her reach or influence." Does Cunningham think Woolf and Mrs Ramsay are the same? Certainly he knows that an author, narrator, and character are all completely different things? But then, what could he mean by this?



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