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Reading Jacob's Room as a Transmission of Shocks

dc.contributor.authorSt. Aubin, Adrienne Michelle
dc.date.accessioned2006-05-30T13:47:09Z
dc.date.available2006-05-30T13:47:09Z
dc.date.issued2006-05-30T13:47:09Z
dc.descriptionAn Honors Thesis Submitted to the Department of English, Cornell University, April 2006. Winner of the Abrams Prize for the Best Senior Honors Thesis in English.en_US
dc.description.abstractThis thesis examines Virginia Woolf's 1923 novel Jacob's Room as a transmission of what Woolf in her unfinished memoir refers to as 'shocks.' In A Sketch of the Past, Woolf describes the experience of these shocks and her immediate desire to explain them, presenting writing as a reparative activity that imparts meaning to the apparently senseless and alleviates pain by creating wholeness out of fragmentation. She illustrates this concept by providing three examples from her own childhood, each of which offers a very different model of experience. In this thesis I relate these shocks to the structure of Jacob's Room and a number of strangely digressive and open-ended passages within it, proposing that the novel actually resists Woolf's own model of reparative writing and does not process shocks into wholes for the reader so much as transmit them to her.en_US
dc.format.extent243382 bytes
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1813/3077
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.subjectJacob's Roomen_US
dc.subjectviolenceen_US
dc.subjectineffabilityen_US
dc.subjectVirginia Woolfen_US
dc.subjectsynecdocheen_US
dc.subject"A Sketch of the Past"
dc.subjectBritish Modernism
dc.titleReading Jacob's Room as a Transmission of Shocksen_US
dc.typedissertation or thesisen_US

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