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Analysis Of Woolf 'A Room Of One's Own' By Virginia Woolf

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1.It is significant that Woolf’s essay is partly fictional, for it shows her greater knowledge of her writing, as she was a woman herself writing fiction. She does not write completely in non-fictional mode, as to not stay biased to her views and experiences, yet to allow the readers to have an open imagination on where the events that had happened at “Oxbridge” could also take place.

2. The original occasion of a “ A Room Of One’s Own” was to describe “Women and what they are like; … women and the fiction that they write; or women and the fiction that is written about them.(Woolf, 3). Woolf addresses women as her audience, and follows to a great extent the advices she intend them to follow.

3.Woolf characterize "Oxbridge" as a material place and in terms of its traditions and conventions, by displaying their unbendable traditions that are kept very strict to their student. In the narrating, the 300 tradition that a women should not be walking on turf was shown as an example of how important it was to follow Oxbridge traditions. The connections between Oxbridge and British life and institutions beyond the universities, Were the patriarchal ruling system behind them all. In all, men had more privilege, and looked down on women.

4.Oxbridge embedded the effect that a women should always depend on a man on Woolf's semi-autobiographical character Mary Beton. As it was shown that every place she went on Oxbridge, she was reminded that women should not do some things

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