Did Virginia Woolf really do all of her writing standing up?
A student asked me that question recently, and I had to think for a moment before I could give her an answer.
We had just finished reading Three Guineas for a class I teach on gender roles in war and peace. The students were not familiar with Woolf. Some of them admitted being afraid to read her novels, as they had heard she was “difficult.” Most had not read more than a snippet or two of A Room of One’s Own.
The student raised the question of Woolf’s writing posture when we took a break in our discussion of Three Guineas. She had read that Woolf did all of her writing standing up, she said, and found it unbelievable that Woolf — or anyone — would be able to do so much writing on foot. It sounded exhausting.
I was excited by her question. It meant that despite the rumored or real “difficulty” of Woolf’s writing, this student had appreciated her enough to find out more about her.
I told my student that I thought Woolf had used a stand-up desk as a young woman living in her parents’ home in Kensington. I mentioned, too, that I recalled seeing a regular desk and chair in Woolf’s writing lodge at Monk’s House in Sussex.
Later, I found a photo posted on Flikr by Renaud Camus that pictures the desk. The Smith College Libraries Woolf in the World online exhibit also links an image of Robert Browning’s portable desk to a quote from one of Woolf’s letters in which she asks for “a desk that shuts up… something that would hold all my letters, papers, ink pots, & shut up & lock, & have drawers, & harmonise with my sister’s decorations.”
And, of course, one can order one’s own Woolf-alike stand-up desk, as long as one has the necessary stamina for writing on foot, as well as the requisite funds.
Read more about where writers write and the routines they follow — including a mention of Woolf’s — on the BBC Web site.
[…] Woolf’s desks — from her stand-up version to her writing board — generate a lot of interest. A March […]
[…] Lisa Baskin Unger acquired the desk from Franklin, and it became one of “the most iconic items” in her collection, which is described as one of the largest and most significant private collections on women’s history. So the Virginia Woolf desk now in Duke’s possession is apparently the edited version of Woolf’s original stand-up desk. […]
“46 Gordon Square was and still is typical of Bloomsbury…Vanessa had bought a new desk and sofa for Virginia’s sitting-room, which was at the very top of the house. Here,
standing
at her desk, in emulation of Vanessa standing at her easel, she would work for hours.” (from Virginia Woolf, Life and London: A Biography of Place, Jean Moorcroft Wilson, pg.45 — and forgive me for not formatting this but I’m using a tiny device…first “standing” should be underlined!)
[…] Twitter via @CitizenWald came the tweet at the bottom of this post. And because it was about a Virginia Woolf desk, I had to find out […]
[…] Woolf is known to have written this way too, with a specialized stand-up desk in her parents’ home in […]
[…] writing desk. This is not the same desk photo posted on Flikr by Renaud Camus that I wrote about two years […]
Thank you for your comment, particularly since you are the creator of the Flikr photo I included with this entry.
And as you point out, Virginia Woolf apparently did her writing from a seated position at Monk’s House. Your photo provides proof of that, which is why I posted it with this blog entry.
Forgive me, Ma’am, but I don’t understand the above entry. The photography I took (as well as innumerable others) shows distinctly that Virginia Woolf, at least at Monk’s House, was not writing standing : the table is at normal heigth and there is a chair. Many writers have written standing, it is or was a fairly common practice, or a fashion, specially in the XIXth century. Victor Hugo, for instance, when photographed writing, is always standing. The reason is mostly muscular and coquettish, they don’t want their stomach muscles to slacken exaggeratly. But this, judging by photographical evidence, does not seem to be the case for our friend.