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Life As We Have Known It

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ISBN-10: 0393007723

ISBN-13: 9780393007725

Edition: Reprint 

Authors: Margaret Llewelyn Davies, Virginia Woolf

List price: $18.95
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Description:

A first-hand record of working class women's experiences in early twentieth-century England, Life as We Have Known It is a unique view of lives Virginia Woolf described as "still half hidden in profound obscurity." The women write about growing up in poverty, going into domestic service, being a hat factory worker, or a miner's wife concerned about the colliery baths, and how they became politically active through the Women's Co-operative Guild movement. Virginia Woolf's essay contains her candid and searching reflections on the Guild's 1913 Congress, the women who spoke there, and the differences between their lives and hers.
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Book details

List price: $18.95
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company, Incorporated
Publication date: 7/17/1975
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 184
Size: 5.25" wide x 7.75" long x 0.25" tall
Weight: 0.330

Virginia Woolf was born in London, the daughter of the prominent literary critic Leslie Stephen. She never received a formal university education; her early education was obtained at home through her parents and governesses. After death of her father in 1904, her family moved to Bloomsbury, where they formed the nucleus of the Bloomsbury Group, a circle of philosophers, writers and artists. As a writer, Woolf was a great experimenter. She scorned the traditional narrative form and turned to expressionism as a means of telling her story. Mrs. Dalloway (1925) and To The Lighthouse (1927), her two generally acknowledged masterpieces, are stream-of-consciousness novels in which most of the…