Rethinking privacy and publicity: Reading the spatial reflections of gender through Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway

dc.contributor.author Zeynep Tuna Ultav
dc.contributor.author BEGÜM SENA ÖNAL
dc.contributor.author Önal, Begüm Sena
dc.contributor.author Ultav, Zeynep Tuna
dc.date.accessioned 2025-10-22T16:05:34Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.description.abstract This article deciphers socio-spatial characteristics of the London scene inthe early twentieth century. Analyzing excerpts from Mrs. Dalloway(1925) a novel written by one of the prominent modernist and feministwriters Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) the literary space analysis aims toascertain how the narrative elucidates the relation between assignedgender roles and spatial practices of the protagonist Clarissa Dalloway.Revealing the abundance of socio-spatial information hidden in literaryfiction the three-partite spatial analysis that examines Mrs. Dalloway’sliving environment within the contexts of private (domestic) space publicspace and ‘internal’ space highlights new layers of textual meaning. Thus the study exposes the spatial hints of Woolf that guide readers tounderstand the confined social position of a high society lady. Touchingupon controversial issues that nurtured the private-public dichotomy thestudy broadens the discussion of gendered space discussing Woolfianspace as a challenge to patriarchal codes. Excerpts examined throughoutthe article reveal that the author's critique on unequal power relationsbetween men and women reveals itself in spatial portrayals in the novel.Therefore scrutinizing Mrs. Dalloway allows rediscovering reinvestigating and rethinking privacy and publicity in the early twentiethcentury through modern fiction.
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dc.identifier.doi 10.37246/grid.918555
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dc.source Grid - architecture planning and design journal (Online)
dc.subject Edebiyat-Kadın Araştırmaları-Edebi Teori ve Eleştiri
dc.subject Kadın Araştırmaları
dc.subject Edebi Teori Ve Eleştiri
dc.subject Edebiyat
dc.title Rethinking privacy and publicity: Reading the spatial reflections of gender through Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway
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gdc.description.departmenttemp [Ultav, Zeynep Tuna; Önal, Begüm Sena] Yaşar Üniversitesi, İç Mimarlık Ve Çevre Tasarımı Bölümü, İzmir, Türkiye
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gdc.oaire.keywords feminist modernism;gender and space;literary space analysis;Mrs. Dalloway;Virginia Woolf
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gdc.virtual.author Önal Özmalatyalilar, Begüm Sena
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