Virginia Woolf’s The Waves (1931): modernism, rhythm and experimentation

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Throughout the 1920s Woolf became more and more bold in her use of innovative, modernist techniques in her fiction. In 1931 she reached her most daring experiment with The Waves, described as “a work which would fundamentally challenge the bounds of fiction” (Gillian Beer). In this course we will explore how Woolf gives the reader “something of the exaltation of poetry, but much of the ordinariness of prose” as she weaves the story of six named individuals into the communal life of a society seeking new ways to live and record experience. 

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