Gardens in the Work of Virginia Woolf: Nature, Modernity and the Politics of Space
This study reads Woolf’s fictional gardens in light of her development as a writer, tracing these spaces alongside elements of her personal life and her changing understanding of nature and space. In the course of this work, these locations are revealed to be emotionally and imaginatively charged, acting as vehicles for powerful sentiments and vital intellectual arguments. Through extensive examinations of texts including The Voyage Out, ‘Kew Gardens’, Jacob’s Room, Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and The Waves, this book frames Woolf’s literary gardens as expressive and innovative spheres that formed part of wider early twentieth-century attempts to reimagine nature and domesticity as vibrant, even radical, facets of modern life.
1148039904
Gardens in the Work of Virginia Woolf: Nature, Modernity and the Politics of Space
This study reads Woolf’s fictional gardens in light of her development as a writer, tracing these spaces alongside elements of her personal life and her changing understanding of nature and space. In the course of this work, these locations are revealed to be emotionally and imaginatively charged, acting as vehicles for powerful sentiments and vital intellectual arguments. Through extensive examinations of texts including The Voyage Out, ‘Kew Gardens’, Jacob’s Room, Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and The Waves, this book frames Woolf’s literary gardens as expressive and innovative spheres that formed part of wider early twentieth-century attempts to reimagine nature and domesticity as vibrant, even radical, facets of modern life.
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Gardens in the Work of Virginia Woolf: Nature, Modernity and the Politics of Space

Gardens in the Work of Virginia Woolf: Nature, Modernity and the Politics of Space

by Karina Jakubowicz
Gardens in the Work of Virginia Woolf: Nature, Modernity and the Politics of Space

Gardens in the Work of Virginia Woolf: Nature, Modernity and the Politics of Space

by Karina Jakubowicz

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$120.00 
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Overview

This study reads Woolf’s fictional gardens in light of her development as a writer, tracing these spaces alongside elements of her personal life and her changing understanding of nature and space. In the course of this work, these locations are revealed to be emotionally and imaginatively charged, acting as vehicles for powerful sentiments and vital intellectual arguments. Through extensive examinations of texts including The Voyage Out, ‘Kew Gardens’, Jacob’s Room, Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and The Waves, this book frames Woolf’s literary gardens as expressive and innovative spheres that formed part of wider early twentieth-century attempts to reimagine nature and domesticity as vibrant, even radical, facets of modern life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474494533
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 02/28/2026
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Karina Jakubowicz is an adjunct lecturer at Fordham UniversityNew York and Florida State University. She is a graduate of UniversityCollege London, Clare College Cambridge, and Trinity College Dublin. She was the recipient of an academic scholarship from Trinity College Dublin and was the winner of the 2017 Katherine Mansfield essay prize. Her numerous publications concern the work of 20th century writers and focus primarily on the role of nature and space in their work. She also creates and produces the Virginia Woolf Podcast.

Table of Contents

List of Figures

Acknowledgements

Abbreviations


Introduction
1. ‘Life in a garden’: Landscapes of Female Development in The Voyage Out

2. ‘Dangerous ground’: The Origins of ‘Kew Gardens’

3. ‘Not in so many words': Cut Flowers and Commemoration in Mrs Dalloway

4. Moving the Tree: Painting the Artist’s Garden in To the Lighthouse

5. ‘Stuck together with faded leaves': Growing Gardens in The Waves

6. ‘A garden full of lust and bees': Queering Woolf’s Literary Gardens

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

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