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Today is the 250th birthday of the celebrated British author Jane Austen, an author that Virginia Woolf held in great esteem, as evidenced by the fact that references to Austen are all over Woolf’s writing.

This is the tiny table where Jane Austen did her writing. Only the tabletop is original. It is housed at Chawton House in Hampshire, the one-time home of Jane’s brother Andrew.

Where Woolf mentions Austen

  • diaries — both early and late
  • letters
  • essays, including a chapter on Austen in The Common Reader: First Series (1925)
  • short story “A Society” (1915)
  • Roger Fry: A Biography (1940)
  • A Room of One’s Own (1929)
  • Three Guineas (1938)
  • The Voyage Out (1915)
  • Jacob’s Room (1922)
  • To the Lighthouse (1927).
  • the “Reminiscences” chapter of her autobiographical Moments of Being (1976)

A few quotes from Woolf about Austen

Interestingly enough, today I spotted these two timeless Austen classics on the book table at the bargain store Five Below in my city.

The wit of Jane Austen has for partner the perfection of her taste. Her fool is a fool, her snob is a snob, because he departs from the model of sanity and sense which she has in mind, and conveys to us unmistakably even while she makes us laugh. Never did any novelist make more use of an impeccable sense of human values. It is against the disc of an unerring heart, an unfailing good taste, an almost stern morality, that she shows up those deviations from kindness, truth, and sincerity which are among the most delightful things in English literature. – The Common Reader: First Series, pg. 141.

The real novelist can somehow convey both sorts of being. I think Jane Austen can – Moments of Being, pg. 70.

More on Austen

For more on Woolf and Austen read “Jane Austen Turns 250: Why the Beloved Author Still Endures Today” from the Washington State University Libraries, which has four first-edition Austen novels in its collection.

See more photos from Jane Austen’s House Museum, which uses 41 objects throughout the house she lived in from 1809-1817 to tell her story, as well as Charlton House, where her brother Edward lived. She visited there regularly.

Jane Austen’s House and Museum, which was her home from 1809-1817.

The rather small bed Jane Austen shared with her sister Charlotte.

 

Here are just a handful of news bits about Virginia Woolf scholars. I know there are more. So if you have one, please add it as a comment below this post. Or send it to me by clicking on the email link in the right sidebar.

  • Maggie Humm’s book The Bloomsbury Photographs (2024) received two honors this year. It was a finalist in the American Writing Award 2025 for Academic/Educational book, and it won the American Writing Award 2025 for photography.
  • Amanda Golden and Karen V. Kukil edited The Poems of Sylvia Plath, which is listed in the Faber Spring Catalogue and is now available for pre-order on Amazon UK. It is considered the definitive edition of Plath’s poetry.
  • Anne Fernald has a new book coming out in August. Her Own Voice: Eight Women Who Rewrote Life and Art tells the stories of eight radical women who responded to social oppression and helped create the modernist movement. In it, Fernald argues that the stories we read shape the lives we imagine for ourselves, and offers these stories as possible templates for living boldly and creatively.
  • Ane Thon Knutsen had another of her works, A Room of One’s Own (2017), included in the Catalog for Artistic Publishing, which is a collection of the most important 100 publications from Norwegian artists.

Charleston in Sussex, England, home of Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant

Charleston is not a dance. Actually, it is. But it is much more. Every day it refers to Charleston in Sussex, England, also known as “Bloomsbury in the country.” And this weekend, the Weekend of Bloomsbury in Antwerp, Charleston is the theme for the second Virginia Woolf and Bloomsbury Festival, which begins today and runs through Sunday.

Hosted by the Gordon Square Society, the festival includes prestigious events based at historic sites around Antwerp. They include:

  • a concert by Pierre Fontenelle & Max Charue
  • Virginia Nicholson on ‘My Childhood at Charleston’
  • Darren Clarke on ‘Is Craft Art?’
  • Gert Voorjans on ‘Sense of Place’
  • a Bloomsbury-themed banquet
  • and an exhibition of all the books hand-printed by Virginia and Leonard Woolf at the Hogarth Press.

Get more details at the Gordon Square Society website.

James Kearns will give the International Virginia Woolf Society’s Annual Lecture on Thursday, Dec. 4, via Zoom.

His talk, “How a ‘Manifesto’ Unfolds: Microgenesis, ‘Modern Novels,’ and the Missing Authoress,” will be followed by a general discussion.

Topic: 2025 IVWS Annual Lecture by James Kearns: “How a ‘Manifesto’ Unfolds: Microgenesis, ‘Modern Novels,’ and the Missing Authoress”
Date: Dec. 4
Time: 9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Mountain Time (US and Canada), 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. EST, and 4-5:30 p.m. GMT

Members have received the Zoom link for the lecture via email. To join the society, visit their website.

The upcoming Woolf Salon on Friday, Dec. 5, will celebrate The Common Reader at 100, Virginia’s book-length work of literary criticism collecting 20 essays which she introduces with a short preface. You can log in via Zoom.

The first salon in July 2020 invited attendees to “imagine a Woolfian criticism.” More than five years later, the salon returns to Woolf’s critical essays and to questions about the difference Woolf’s reading and thinking—and her thinking about reading—might make for us here and now.

  • Why might the concept “common reader” be of urgent concern in our Present Day?
  • As you return to the essays gathered in the 1925 volume, what comes to mind?
  • What do you notice about Woolf’s approach to literature as “common ground”?
  • Does anything prompt you to wonder about your own reading practices? Your own framework(s) of criticism?
  • What confuses you? What activates you? What in these pages do you relish?

Details

Hosts: Salon Conspirators
What: Woolf Salon #32: The Common Reader at 100
Date: Friday, Dec. 5
Time: 2 p.m. EST (New York) / 1 p.m. CST (Chicago) / noon MST (Albuquerque) / noon CST (México City) / 11 a.m. PST (Los Angeles) / 4 p.m. (Rio de Janeiro) / 7 p.m. GMT (London) / 8 p.m. CET (Paris) / 9 p.m. EET (Tallinn); 10 p.m. (Istanbul; Moscow) / 4 a.m. JST Sat 12/6 (Tokyo) / 6 a.m. AEDT Sat 12/6 (Sydney)
Homework: “Modern Fiction,” which you can read here. Also, please bring a passage from or a question about another Common Reader essay.
How to participate: Anyone can join the group. Just contact woolfsalonproject@gmail.com to sign up for the email list and receive the Zoom link.

Background on the Salon

The Salon Conspirators — Ben 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.