Abstract
Drawing on a forthcoming book by Rok Benčin on the concept of world (the multiplicity of real worlds as transcendental frameworks and the fictional structure thereof), the article proposes a reading of Between the Acts by Virginia Woolf that focuses on the dialectic of dispersion and unity. The novel presents a multiplicity of dispersed and fragmented transcendental frameworks that tend towards – an attempt that is always doomed to fail, but always begins anew – unification within the ideological apparatuses (family, religion, national history, literary canon). In this endless dialectic, literature occupies a singular place, for the fictional structure of these frameworks makes of it a transcendental-abyss, which enables passage from the novel of worlds to the world of the novel.
Publisher
The Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts (ZRC SAZU)
Reference4 articles.
1. Benčin, Rok, Rethinking the Concept of World: Towards Transcendental Multiplicity, Edinbourgh, Edinburgh University Press, à paraître.
2. Benčin, Rok, “Worlds as Transcendental and Political Fictions”, Filozofski vestnik, 42 (2/2021), pp. 221–243.
3. Briggs, Julia, Virginia Woolf : an Inner Life, Londres, Allen Lane, 2005.
4. Virginia Woolf, Between the Acts, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1972.