Subtitle: Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell, Photography, and Cinema
Author: Maggie Humm
Subject: Womens Studies/Literary Studies/Art Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3266-3
Pages: 244 pp. 45 b&w photos
Description: A study of the visual and literary aesthetics of three modernist women writers
Praise for Modernist Women and Visual Cultures
"This book opens new perspectives on the most important artistic movement of the twentieth century."-Shari Benstock, professor of English and associate dean, University of Miami and author of Women of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900-1940
This volume presents an original study of the visual and literary aesthetics of influential modernist women writers, in particular Virginia Woolf, HD (Hilda Doolittle), and Dorothy Richardson. Maggie Humm focuses on the neglected (often intimate) domestic photographs of Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell; on Woolf's essay "The Cinema" in the context of cinema journalism by other modernists; and on the influence of photography on Woolf's Three Guineas, her short visual fictions (particularly "Portraits"), and her modernist essays. Humm examines how modernist women explore a freer range of aesthetics than their male counterparts by looking at not only what has been called women's work at the margins of modernity, but also at what might be called the even more marginalized material within those boundaries-photo albums and image-texts.
More than one thousand of Virginia Woolf's uncatalogued photographs, and a similar number of Vanessa Bell's, have been sitting in archives scarcely touched until now. Modernist Women and Visual Cultures makes many of these photographs available for the first time. Both the photographs and this fresh analysis will prove fascinating to anyone interested in the many cultures of modernism.
Maggie Humm is a professor in cultural studies at the University of East London. She is the author of eleven books including Feminism and Film and Modern Feminisms: The Dictionary of Feminist Theory.