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Class 17 
Ewrt 2
AGENDA 
 Section # 4: Privilege and Perspective 
 Discussion: Woolf's “Shakespeare’s Sister" 
 Bio 
 Rhetorical Strategies 
 Questions for Critical Reading 
 QHQ 
 Essay #4
Who is Virginia 
Woolf?
A Brief Biography 
Adeline Virginia Woolf was born 
January 25, 1882, into a large family, 
in London, England. She grew up in 
an atmosphere conducive to her 
future career as a writer since her 
father, Leslie Stephen, was a 
respected and well-known 
intellectual and writer. Although she 
was not sent to a university as were 
her brothers, she was able to educate 
herself thoroughly by delving into the 
volumes of her father's vast library.
Woolf grew up during a period of 
intense feminist activity in London and 
was an active member of various 
women's organizations. By the time 
she came into her own as a writer, 
significant advances had been made in 
women's rights. By 1918, a limited 
franchise (vote) had been granted to 
women in England. Also, since World 
War I (1914-18) had thinned the ranks of 
working men, women had begun to 
enter the professions in large numbers. 
Woolf began her career by writing 
literary criticism, published her first 
novel in 1915, and published both 
fiction and nonfiction copiously until 
her suicide in 1941.
She is well known internationally for her 
many superb novels and collections of 
essays. A Room of One's Own (1929) 
and Three Guineas (1938) are important 
feminist tracts written by Woolf. 
Woolf and the man who would become 
her husband, Leonard Woolf, were part 
of a group of artists, writers, and 
intellectuals known as the Bloomsbury 
Group. 
This group met regularly at Woolf and her brother's house 
in the Bloomsbury neighborhood of London before Woolf 
married, when she was still known as Virginia Stephen. 
After their marriage, the Woolfs began a small publishing 
house, Hogarth Press, in 1917.
After Virginia Woolf met fellow 
writer Vita Sackville-West in the 
early 1920s, the two women had a 
romantic affair that lasted for a 
number of years. 
Virginia and Vita first met at a dinner 
party in 1922. After learning that Vita 
was a writer, Virginia invited her to 
publish a novel with her small press, 
Hogarth Press. 
Vita was from an aristocratic family, 
the Sackville-West’s of Sevenoaks in 
Kent where they lived in their 
ancestral home called Knole house. 
Vita and her husband, who were 
both bisexual and both writers, had 
an open marriage.
Knole: Sackville Estate
Sissinghurst
Woolf suffered bouts of depression throughout her life. After each 
bout, especially as her life advanced, she worried that the next 
time she might not return to full sanity. It was this fear, combined 
with her sense of horror at the events of World War II (1939-1944), 
that led her to take her own life. She drowned herself in the river 
Ouse in Sussex, England, on March 28, 1941.
Get into your groups!
In groups, Discuss 
“Shakespeare’s Sister” 
From 
Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own 
Consider her rhetorical strategies, the essay’s 
content, and the “Questions for Critical 
Reading” (page 776)
Which 
Rhetorical 
Strategies 
Does Woolf 
Use?
Rhetorical Strategies 
 Scenario 
 Simile 
 Controlled and cool tone 
 Allusion 
 Politeness
Content: 
“Shakespeare’s Sister”
1. Woolf imagines the career of of 
Shakespeare's fictional sister, Judith. What 
happens to Judith, and why? 
2. How does Judith's fate show that "genius" 
is not above history and material 
circumstance? 
3. What was granted to Shakespeare that 
would not have been granted to a sister 
with equal potential?
1. Why were men so prosperous and women so poor? 
2. What conditions are necessary for the creation of works 
of art? 
3. Are the obstacles in the way of women’s success also in 
the way of the Working Classes? 
4. Woolf has sometimes been criticized for being elitist: 
how does Woolf’s class position affect her views? 
5. Are her theories about writing and poverty—for both 
men and women—valid today?
Questions for 
Critical Reading
• How did 
Elizabethan 
gender roles limit 
opportunities in 
literature? 
• Why does Woolf 
begin by referring 
to an eminent 
historian?
• Why does history 
treat sixteenth-and 
seventeenth-century 
women 
with so little 
notice? 
• What is Woolf’s 
point regarding 
the behavior of 
Oscar Browning?
Questions 
•Why does 
Woolf worry 
over the 
relation of 
opinions to 
facts?
 What is the 
difference 
between the way 
women are 
represented in 
history and the 
way they are 
depicted in fiction? 
 Why does Woolf 
have Judith 
Shakespeare 
become pregnant?
QHQs: Woolf 
• Q : Why does Woolf use an 
imaginary sister for 
Shakespeare to compare a 
man and a woman’s life to 
explain the limitations of 
women? 
• Q: How does the industrial 
revolution change the role 
of women? Compare 
author with women from 
Elizabethan period. 
• Q: Why is a father 
“shamed” when his 
daughter refuses to 
marry? 
• Q: How would an 
Elizabethan era wife 
react to her daughter 
refusing to marry?
QHQ: Woolf 
• Q: What made Judith 
kill herself? 
• Q: Were women in 
Woolf’s time forced to 
be in “the cave” 
mentioned by Plato? 
• Q: Why do woman take 
jobs that require 
themselves to look 
unintelligent to the 
world? 
• Q: Will woman always be 
seen as objects?
QHQs: Plato 
• Q: Socrates brings up an 
instance if a prisoner 
were to escape would he, 
“not have a pain in his 
eyes which will make him 
turn away?” Is his 
statement true? 
• Q. Why do people choose 
to remain blind from the 
truth and reality? 
• Q: Is ignorance bliss? 
• Q: Shouldn’t those who 
ascend to the upper 
world also show the way 
to those in the prison so 
that they may also see 
the light, instead of just 
returning to them the 
prison?
Options: Essay # 4 Will be an in-class essay in response to 
either Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave” Or Woolf’s 
“Shakespeare’s Sister”
Essay #4: Class 19 
 You will respond to one of several prompts provided. 
There will be prompts addressing each Plato and 
Woolf. 
 Your essay will be between 500 and 750 words. The 
number of pages will depend on your handwriting! 
 You will have two hours to write. 
 Please bring a clean, large Blue Book: 
 (Approx. 8x10). You can buy them at the bookstore. 
 You may write with either a number 2 pencil (dark 
lead) or blue or black pen.
 Prepare for essay test 4 
 Post # 32 QHQ: How can we 
apply the ideas of Plato and 
Woolf to A Game of Thrones? 
Make sure to include textual 
support in your post. You 
might consider how Woolf’s 
notions can be extended 
beyond the realm of women.

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Ewrt 2 class 17 woolf

  • 2. AGENDA  Section # 4: Privilege and Perspective  Discussion: Woolf's “Shakespeare’s Sister"  Bio  Rhetorical Strategies  Questions for Critical Reading  QHQ  Essay #4
  • 4. A Brief Biography Adeline Virginia Woolf was born January 25, 1882, into a large family, in London, England. She grew up in an atmosphere conducive to her future career as a writer since her father, Leslie Stephen, was a respected and well-known intellectual and writer. Although she was not sent to a university as were her brothers, she was able to educate herself thoroughly by delving into the volumes of her father's vast library.
  • 5. Woolf grew up during a period of intense feminist activity in London and was an active member of various women's organizations. By the time she came into her own as a writer, significant advances had been made in women's rights. By 1918, a limited franchise (vote) had been granted to women in England. Also, since World War I (1914-18) had thinned the ranks of working men, women had begun to enter the professions in large numbers. Woolf began her career by writing literary criticism, published her first novel in 1915, and published both fiction and nonfiction copiously until her suicide in 1941.
  • 6. She is well known internationally for her many superb novels and collections of essays. A Room of One's Own (1929) and Three Guineas (1938) are important feminist tracts written by Woolf. Woolf and the man who would become her husband, Leonard Woolf, were part of a group of artists, writers, and intellectuals known as the Bloomsbury Group. This group met regularly at Woolf and her brother's house in the Bloomsbury neighborhood of London before Woolf married, when she was still known as Virginia Stephen. After their marriage, the Woolfs began a small publishing house, Hogarth Press, in 1917.
  • 7. After Virginia Woolf met fellow writer Vita Sackville-West in the early 1920s, the two women had a romantic affair that lasted for a number of years. Virginia and Vita first met at a dinner party in 1922. After learning that Vita was a writer, Virginia invited her to publish a novel with her small press, Hogarth Press. Vita was from an aristocratic family, the Sackville-West’s of Sevenoaks in Kent where they lived in their ancestral home called Knole house. Vita and her husband, who were both bisexual and both writers, had an open marriage.
  • 10. Woolf suffered bouts of depression throughout her life. After each bout, especially as her life advanced, she worried that the next time she might not return to full sanity. It was this fear, combined with her sense of horror at the events of World War II (1939-1944), that led her to take her own life. She drowned herself in the river Ouse in Sussex, England, on March 28, 1941.
  • 11. Get into your groups!
  • 12. In groups, Discuss “Shakespeare’s Sister” From Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own Consider her rhetorical strategies, the essay’s content, and the “Questions for Critical Reading” (page 776)
  • 13. Which Rhetorical Strategies Does Woolf Use?
  • 14. Rhetorical Strategies  Scenario  Simile  Controlled and cool tone  Allusion  Politeness
  • 16. 1. Woolf imagines the career of of Shakespeare's fictional sister, Judith. What happens to Judith, and why? 2. How does Judith's fate show that "genius" is not above history and material circumstance? 3. What was granted to Shakespeare that would not have been granted to a sister with equal potential?
  • 17. 1. Why were men so prosperous and women so poor? 2. What conditions are necessary for the creation of works of art? 3. Are the obstacles in the way of women’s success also in the way of the Working Classes? 4. Woolf has sometimes been criticized for being elitist: how does Woolf’s class position affect her views? 5. Are her theories about writing and poverty—for both men and women—valid today?
  • 19. • How did Elizabethan gender roles limit opportunities in literature? • Why does Woolf begin by referring to an eminent historian?
  • 20. • Why does history treat sixteenth-and seventeenth-century women with so little notice? • What is Woolf’s point regarding the behavior of Oscar Browning?
  • 21. Questions •Why does Woolf worry over the relation of opinions to facts?
  • 22.  What is the difference between the way women are represented in history and the way they are depicted in fiction?  Why does Woolf have Judith Shakespeare become pregnant?
  • 23. QHQs: Woolf • Q : Why does Woolf use an imaginary sister for Shakespeare to compare a man and a woman’s life to explain the limitations of women? • Q: How does the industrial revolution change the role of women? Compare author with women from Elizabethan period. • Q: Why is a father “shamed” when his daughter refuses to marry? • Q: How would an Elizabethan era wife react to her daughter refusing to marry?
  • 24. QHQ: Woolf • Q: What made Judith kill herself? • Q: Were women in Woolf’s time forced to be in “the cave” mentioned by Plato? • Q: Why do woman take jobs that require themselves to look unintelligent to the world? • Q: Will woman always be seen as objects?
  • 25. QHQs: Plato • Q: Socrates brings up an instance if a prisoner were to escape would he, “not have a pain in his eyes which will make him turn away?” Is his statement true? • Q. Why do people choose to remain blind from the truth and reality? • Q: Is ignorance bliss? • Q: Shouldn’t those who ascend to the upper world also show the way to those in the prison so that they may also see the light, instead of just returning to them the prison?
  • 26. Options: Essay # 4 Will be an in-class essay in response to either Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave” Or Woolf’s “Shakespeare’s Sister”
  • 27. Essay #4: Class 19  You will respond to one of several prompts provided. There will be prompts addressing each Plato and Woolf.  Your essay will be between 500 and 750 words. The number of pages will depend on your handwriting!  You will have two hours to write.  Please bring a clean, large Blue Book:  (Approx. 8x10). You can buy them at the bookstore.  You may write with either a number 2 pencil (dark lead) or blue or black pen.
  • 28.  Prepare for essay test 4  Post # 32 QHQ: How can we apply the ideas of Plato and Woolf to A Game of Thrones? Make sure to include textual support in your post. You might consider how Woolf’s notions can be extended beyond the realm of women.