[Vwoolf] Editions of The Waves?
sbarkway at btinternet.com
sbarkway at btinternet.com
Tue May 27 03:54:12 EDT 2025
I was going to say David Bradshaw’s Oxford World’s Classics edition (2015) but I see that that is probably what you meant with ‘David Wright’?
Stephen
From: Vwoolf <vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu> On Behalf Of Edward Mendelson via Vwoolf
Sent: 26 May 2025 20:24
To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu
Subject: [Vwoolf] Editions of The Waves?
Here's another diffident request for help from this uniquely well-informed list. As far as I know, these are the editions of The Waves that make use of textual scholarship and that include notes on textual variants. Are there others? Am I missing
Here's another diffident request for help from this uniquely well-informed list.
As far as I know, these are the editions of The Waves that make use of textual scholarship and that include notes on textual variants. Are there others? Am I missing something obvious, as is likely to be the case? The list is:
The 1990 Hogarth Press "Definitive Collected Edition"
Gillian Beer's 1992 Oxford World's Classics edition
Kate Flint's 1992 Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics edition
Stella McNichol's 1992 edition in the Macmillan "student compendium," Collected Novels of Virginia Woolf (with Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse)
James M. Haule and Philip H. Smith, Jr.'s 1993 Shakespeare Head Press edition
Molly Hite's 2006 annotated Harcourt edition
Michael Herbert and Susan Sellers' 2011 edition in the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Virginia Woolf
David Wright's 2015 Oxford World's Classics edition
That's eight different editions, but this is a book that deserves many more, and I'll be grateful to know which ones I've missed.
Many thanks to all.
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