Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography

Virginia Woolf’s legacy was both photographic and biographical, she inherited her father’s interest in biography and her great-aunt’s fascination for photography and welded those interests all along her career as a novelist, biographer and theoretician. ‘The New Biography’, the 1927 article by she m...

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Main Author: Floriane Reviron-Piégay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2017-10-01
Series:Études Britanniques Contemporaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3973
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spelling doaj-1d60c80d250c45da8dc4d9e802a3e14c2020-11-24T21:07:20ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉtudes Britanniques Contemporaines1168-49172271-54442017-10-015310.4000/ebc.3973Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs PhotographyFloriane Reviron-PiégayVirginia Woolf’s legacy was both photographic and biographical, she inherited her father’s interest in biography and her great-aunt’s fascination for photography and welded those interests all along her career as a novelist, biographer and theoretician. ‘The New Biography’, the 1927 article by she meant to revolutionize biography, expresses the advent of the new genre in terms which are laden with visual metaphors and seems to equate the task of the new biographer with the task of the photographer. In 1938 however, with ‘The Art of Biography’, Woolf reverted to a more pessimistic vision of photography, one that confined it to the realm of inaccurate and fallacious representation. In short, the great biographer had the genius of the painter, the bad biographer merely conveyed a photographic likeness, a semblance of personality. I shall argue that this change in attitude towards photography was in fact linked to the biographical practice of Woolf at the time she wrote her essays. Orlando and Flush illustrate the fascination felt by Woolf for photography whose representative potential she playfully experimented with in her subversive texts, whereas Roger Fry and her use of photographs as illustrations probably derived from a more derogatory conception of photography as mimetic and superficial representation.http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3973modernismbiographyphotographymimetic representationvisual artstheory and practice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Floriane Reviron-Piégay
spellingShingle Floriane Reviron-Piégay
Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography
Études Britanniques Contemporaines
modernism
biography
photography
mimetic representation
visual arts
theory and practice
author_facet Floriane Reviron-Piégay
author_sort Floriane Reviron-Piégay
title Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography
title_short Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography
title_full Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography
title_fullStr Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography
title_full_unstemmed Virginia Woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: Biography vs Photography
title_sort virginia woolf’s ‘raids across boundaries’: biography vs photography
publisher Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée
series Études Britanniques Contemporaines
issn 1168-4917
2271-5444
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Virginia Woolf’s legacy was both photographic and biographical, she inherited her father’s interest in biography and her great-aunt’s fascination for photography and welded those interests all along her career as a novelist, biographer and theoretician. ‘The New Biography’, the 1927 article by she meant to revolutionize biography, expresses the advent of the new genre in terms which are laden with visual metaphors and seems to equate the task of the new biographer with the task of the photographer. In 1938 however, with ‘The Art of Biography’, Woolf reverted to a more pessimistic vision of photography, one that confined it to the realm of inaccurate and fallacious representation. In short, the great biographer had the genius of the painter, the bad biographer merely conveyed a photographic likeness, a semblance of personality. I shall argue that this change in attitude towards photography was in fact linked to the biographical practice of Woolf at the time she wrote her essays. Orlando and Flush illustrate the fascination felt by Woolf for photography whose representative potential she playfully experimented with in her subversive texts, whereas Roger Fry and her use of photographs as illustrations probably derived from a more derogatory conception of photography as mimetic and superficial representation.
topic modernism
biography
photography
mimetic representation
visual arts
theory and practice
url http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3973
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