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Archive for February, 2024

Leonard Woolf bust at Monk’s House in Rodmell, Sussex, England

Thanks to the efforts of members of the Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, Leonard Woolf will receive the honor of having Brighton & Hove’s bus number 717 named after him.

The bus will be named in the next four to eight weeks, and details will be added to the Brighton bus website.

Inspired by a chance encounter with the Virginia Woolf bus by society member Stephen Barkway, as reported in the January 2023 issue of the Virginia Woolf Bulletin, the campaign for a bus named after Leonard Woolf was led by Marielle O’Neill, who is undertaking a PhD. on Leonard and Virginia Woolf’s political activism.

Acknowledgements

O’Neill acknowledges the backing of the society, especially that of Claire Nicholson (chair), and Suren Paul (chair of the Leonard Woolf Society). Thanks also to Maria Caulfield MP, Cllr Paul Mellor and the Board of Deputies of British Jews for their valuable support.

The cover of Issue No. 72 – January 2023 of the Virginia Woolf Bulletin features the Brighton & Hove Virginia Woolf bus.

“It’s wonderful to see Leonard Woolf’s great contribution to politics and publishing recognised. Given Leonard Woolf’s activism in the local community and public-spirited nature it is particularly fitting that this tribute will benefit ordinary people in the Brighton area,” O’Neill said.

The bus to be named for Leonard Woolf is one of the brand new accessible Coaster buses, with two wheelchair bays, dementia-friendly flooring and seating, audio and visual next-stop announcements, and onboard loop system.

The Virginia and Vanessa buses

The Leonard Woolf bus will join existing buses named after Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell. Virginia’s bus, number 472, was named after her in March of 2021. Before that, her name adorned bus number 887 and 845, according to Barkway (35).

You can view both at the Brighton & Hove buses website.

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The deadline has been extended to March 31 for the call for papers for the first-ever conference on Virginia Woolf’s father, Leslie Stephen, which will be held at Université Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris on Oct. 24-25, 2024. The conference title is “Leslie Stephen: Thinking With and Against His Time International Conference.”

Virginia and Leslie Stephen

Proposal parameters

Abstracts of about 300 words, for 25-minute papers in English, together with a short (100-word) author biography, should be sent to the organizers by March 31, 2024, at: leslie.stephen.conference@gmail.com.

Organizers are Claire Davison (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris); Isabelle Gadoin (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris); and Marie Laniel (Université de Picardie, Amiens).

Post-conference collection

A selection of peer-reviewed articles based on papers given at the conference will be collected for publication. In case of difficulties tracing Stephen’s works, please contact the organizers at leslie.stephen.conference@gmail.com, who will be happy to share links and resources.

Confirmed keynote speakers

  • Prof. Terry Gifford (Bath Spa University)
  • Dr. Jane Potter (Oxford Brookes University)
  • Dr. Trudi Tate (Clare Hall, University of Cambridge)

About Leslie Stephen

Early advocate of evolutionism, one of the first openly declared agnostics, editor of the Cornhill Magazine, pioneering mountaineer, moral philosopher, founder and general editor of the DNB: there are so many more facets to Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) than those recorded by his daughter Virginia Woolf, who memorably paid tribute to his “strong,” “healthy out of door, moor striding mind”. By unfolding all the contradictions and paradoxes of the character, this first international conference on Leslie Stephen means to reclaim the full complexity of his thought and legacy.

Thinking with and against his time, Stephen held a key position at the heart of the Victorian literary scene and was an impressively prolific writer, profoundly engaged with the religious, philosophical and social debates of his age. A highly respected journalist and critic, he edited the Cornhill Magazine from 1871 to 1882, publishing works by George Meredith, Thomas Hardy, John Addington Symonds, Henry James and R.L. Stevenson, and was the author of hundreds of essays, published over the course of forty years in periodicals, such as the Fortnightly ReviewFraser’s MagazineMacmillan’s MagazineMind, the National Review, the Nineteenth Century, the Saturday Review or the Pall Mall Gazette, a vast oeuvre now finally accessible thanks to online databases.  

His devotion to knowledge and integrity were such that he preferred to break with the academic world of Cambridge rather than compromise with the Church. Heir to the Clapham Sect, Stephen engaged with the theological debates of his time to the point of gradually and publicly embracing agnosticism, a form of radicalism that coexisted from then on with forms of traditionalism.

 His own prolific output bears witness to his encyclopaedic mind and his boundless curiosity for all the key issues of the day, however polemical: the anti-slavery movement, agnosticism, educational and social reform… Both a man of his time and a pioneer, Stephen explored new epistemological modes in keeping with the expanding frontiers of his age, while remaining profoundly anchored in some of the values and hierarchies of the day.

The Dictionary of National Biography (DNB), his life’s work, and one of his most ambitious projects, is the finest example of his desire to define new modes of classification and new forms of expression for the expanding knowledge of his time. Breaking with the established narratives of the past, he devised a new approach to writing the biography of the nation, doing away with the grandiose tradition of commemoration. In its place, he developed a more archaeological approach, delving into the past and collating the life stories of all those who helped shape the evolution of the country.

The same pioneering spirit stoked his passion for the Alps and mountaineering, in which he proved as much a trailblazer as he did in intellectual life. It is this conquering spirit that his close friend Thomas Hardy immortalized in his poem “The Schreckhorn, With Thoughts of Leslie Stephen” (1897), which extolled his will to “venture life and limb” as well as the “quaint glooms” of his personality, when paying tribute to Stephen as the first man ever to ascend this mountain.

However daring and rigorous in his endeavours, Stephen was no less a direct heir to the Romantic tradition. An ardent poetry lover, he could quote vast swathes of the poetic canon, from Milton to Wordsworth, Tennyson and Arnold, and would rhythm both domestic life and mountaineering exploits with his recitations. Likewise, despite his allegiance to Victorian models of “Muscular Christianity”, and the manly world of clubs and fellowships, he would at times indulge in various forms of sentimentalism and melodramatic displays of emotion.

The call for papers

These are some of the contradictions that the participants to this conference are invited to explore. Similarly, his vast output deserves to be reconsidered through diverse critical paradigms, such as new materialist History, print culture studies, new sensory studies, phenomenology, affect studies and ethics, gender studies, health and disability studies.

We welcome contributions focusing on Leslie Stephen, but also on the following topics, connected with his life and times and shedding light on the larger context of his work:

  • Victorian encyclopaedism
  • Victorian periodicals, print culture, the publishing industry
  • Biography, the DNB, “hero-worship”
  • Stephen’s relations to Victorian sages and prophets
  • Letters, epistolarity, literary networks
  • Cambridge, academia, education and university reform
  • Gentlemen’s clubs, sociability
  • 18th century philosophy and literature, the Enlightenment
  • Utilitarianism, Science, Evolutionism
  • The Clapham Sect, Agnosticism, Scepticism
  • War, the anti-slavery movement
  • Morality, the “science of ethics”
  • Mountaineering, athletics, walking, nature and travel writing
  • Memory, elegy, mourning, the Mausoleum Book, Virginia Woolf & Leslie Stephen

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Join an online panel on Virginia Woolf at the 51st Annual Louisville Conference on Literature and Culture on Monday, Feb. 19, noon to 1:30 p.m. EST.

Sponsored by the International Virginia Woolf Society, the panel includes:

  • Amar Roy on “Finding Mrs. Brown: Memory, Emotion and Narratives in Virginia Woolf’s Approach to Art.”
  • Amrita Chakraborti on “Anti-Work Woolf: Virginia Woolf and Critiques of Waged Labour”
  • Matthew Biberman
  • Meghna Dutta, and
  • Tatyana Kasima on “Windows as Heterotopic Thresholds in Virginia Woolf’s Short Stories Collection ‘A Haunted House'”

How to attend

Attendance is free and registration is available at this link. Just scroll down towards the bottom of the page and register as a “Non-presenting, Zoom attendee.”

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The Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain invites all members to a free members-only online event titled “Bloomsbury in Love,” in honor of Valentine’s Day as well as the love relationships of members of the Bloomsbury group.

Details

When: Wednesday, Feb, 21, 5:30 p.m. GMT
Where: On Zoom. Members will be sent the Zoom link.
What: An evening of readings by members about love and relationships from Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group.
How: If you are not already a member of the society, join now to participate.

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The Woolf Salon is back,after a seven-month hiatus. Woolf Salon No. 26: Faces and Voices is set for Friday, Feb. 23, 2-4 p.m. ET.

The details

Event: Woolf Salon No. 26: Faces and Voices
Hosts: Salon Conspirators
Day: Friday, Feb. 23
Time: 2–4 p.m. ET (New York)
Where: On Zoom
How: Contact woolfsalonproject@gmail.com to sign up for the email list and receive the Zoom link.

The readings

To cover the topic “Faces and Voices,” participants will spend some time with Woolf and that (in)substantial territory between prose and poem and prose poem and sketch and draft and experimental collaboration.

Intrigued? Join in for a discussion of “Portraits,” “Uncle Vanya,” and “Ode WrittenPartly in Prose on Seeing the Name of Cutbush Above a Butcher Shop in Pentonville.”

You can find all three selections in The Complete Shorter Fiction of Virginia Woolf, 2nd ed. (pp. 237–47, with Susan Dick’s notes on 307–08). (If you don’t have a copy, you may find this link helpful.)

How to join the Salon

Anyone can join the group, which meets via Zoom and focuses on a single topic or text. Just contact woolfsalonproject@gmail.com to sign up for the email list and receive the Zoom link.

Future Salons planned

  • Friday, April 19, at 2 p.m. ET – Woolf Salon No. 27: The Miscellany at Issue 100
  • Friday, July 26, at 2 p.m. ET – Woolf Salon No. 28: TBA

The last Woolf Salon, Woolf Salon No. 25: Party Time, was held July 28.

Background on the Salon

The Salon Conspirators — Benjamin Hagen, Shilo McGiff, Amy Smith, and Drew Shannon — began the Woolf Salon Project in July 2020 to provide opportunities for conversation and conviviality among Woolf-interested scholars, students, and common readers during and beyond the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

 

 

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