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Between the Acts

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Language
English
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About the book

Virginia Woolf's final novel, Between the Acts, stages a village pageant at Pointz Hall on a summer day in 1939, turning a seemingly provincial gathering into a meditation on English history, theatrical illusion, class, gender, and impending war. Its style is late modernist at its most distilled: fragmented voices, lyrical interruptions, abrupt shifts in perspective, and a porous boundary between performance and life. Published posthumously in 1941, the novel belongs to the shadowed literature of the interwar period, where cultural memory confronts political catastrophe. Woolf wrote the book after decades of formal experimentation, from Mrs Dalloway to The Waves, and it bears the marks of her lifelong concern with consciousness, art, and social ritual. As a central figure of the Bloomsbury Group, a feminist critic, and a writer living through the rise of fascism and another European war, Woolf shaped this novel from both aesthetic daring and historical urgency. This is an essential book for readers interested in modernism, feminist literary history, and the power of art under pressure. Subtle, unsettling, and brilliantly composed, it rewards attentive reading.

Editions (11)

ISBN9788028338824
PublisherSharp Ink
Publication Date11/27/23
Pages76
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    tausendlexi

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