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Introduction Virginia Woolf is frequently remembered through a haze of sepia-toned fragility: the doomed genius, the ethereal invalid, the woman who walked into the River Ouse. This romanticized image, while tragic, obscures the steely, practical reality of her life as a working professional. Woolf was not merely a passive vessel for the stream of consciousness; she was a relentless experimenter, a shrewd publisher, and a materialist thinker who understood that the soaring heights of art are built upon the solid foundations of economics. To understand Virginia Woolf’s contribution to the twentieth century is to understand a complex triangulation between gender,…
