
GNE-Events
Prof. Maggie HummVirginia Woolf and Aesthetics
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Maggie Humm is a Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of East London. Her books include Border Traffic, The Dictionary of Feminist Theory, Modern Feminisms, Feminism and Film, Modernist Women and Visual Cultures: Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell. She was an editor of the Routledge Encyclopaedia of Women and has been a Distinguished Visiting Scholar and Professor at many universities including Massachusetts, San Diego State, Stanford, Rutgers, Queen`s Belfast, and Karachi. Her most recent book is ‘The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and the Arts’.
Virginia Woolf and Aesthetics
The paper offers an intellectual and aesthetic framework for the writings of Virginia Woolf’s. Recent interdisciplinary work on Woolf shows how Woolf’s creation of modern identities is caught up in the inter-relationships between the arts and in Bloomsbury’s re-thinking of aesthetic theories. Post-impressionism was a preoccupation of the Bloomsbury group in the 1910s and had a profound influence on Woolf’s ideas and writings on art. Later, in her essays of the 1920s, and also throughout her novels, Woolf is preoccupied with questions about the nature of art in relation to society.
Woolf’s aesthetic theories developed in relation to early twentieth-century developments in the arts, including exhibitions, gallery acquisitions, and art publishing. The ideas of early twentieth-century philosophers and aestheticians also had an important impact on Woolf’s work and on her ideas about artistic ethics. Woolf’s aesthetics also drew on the politics of suffrage campaigns, and racial performances.
The paper will describe the art world of the early twentieth-century, and will touch on Woolf’s aesthetics of gender in The Voyage Out, To the Lighthouse, and Orlando, focusing on Woolf’s radical reframing of politics in Three Guineas by means of a new photographic aesthetic. The paper assesses the uniqueness of Woolf’s aesthetics and her unique contribution to a political aesthetic.
See for details website: www.maggiehumm.net and for more: http://www.uel.ac.uk/hss/staff/maggie-humm/index.htm












