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Virginia Woolf's 'Two Cafeterias'

Decent Essays

In the two excerpts from Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own,” she compares a daily meal at a men’s college to a meal at a women’s college. In the Woolf “Two Cafeterias” there is an underlying attitude towards women’s place in society that is made evident by Woolf in the two passages. Her support of women’s equality is blatantly seen in her writing. Woolf’s experience shown in Passage #1 is nothing less than exquisite. The food was superb. The help was sophisticated. And the atmosphere was high-class and soothing. Woolf describes all these fabulous college wonders with rich sentences cooked to perfection and served on a silver platter. With the “potatoes, thin as coins but not so hard” and the “sprouts, foliated as rosebuds but more succulent” what more could one ask for? Perhaps a glass of fine wine and a sweet cigar, or an easy-going conversation while the serving man clears the table would suffice. …show more content…

She uses language detailed enough to make the reader yearn for the next coming mealtime. “Sharp and sweet” as she says, are the tastes of the classic courses of soups and salads. Wineglasses are “flushed yellow and flushed crimson” and refilled in an instant as the meal progresses. The men are treated as guests rather than meager students. Woolf sums it up in the closing sentence: “We are all going to Heaven… how good life seemed.” This is no cafeteria, it’s a paradise; Heaven on earth. There is no want. There is no need. These men can live here in endless bliss, cavorting around freely for the rest of eternity. No need to hurry on to the next class. No need to clear the way for the next meal’s preparations. No need to do anything besides sit and savor the flavors that life has to

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