• Virginia Woolf’s Room: Gender, Modernism, and the Literary Marketplace

    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,…

    Read more >

  • The Bloomsbury Web: Intimacy, Aesthetics, and the Construction of Cultural Elite

    Introduction In the cultural imagination of the twentieth century, few entities loom as large, or as ambiguously, as the Bloomsbury Group. Often reduced in popular caricature to a collection of “couples who lived in squares and loved in triangles,” the group was, in reality, a complex intellectual powerhouse that fundamentally altered the trajectory of British modernism. They were a loose collective of friends, lovers, artists, and writers who congregated in the Bloomsbury district of London during the first half of the twentieth century, united not by a manifesto or a formal constitution, but by a shared rejection of Victorian distinctiveness…

    Read more >