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Há 5 dias · That novel is Orlando by twentieth-century modernist Virginia Woolf. Written in 1928, Orlando is a masterpiece of modernist queer fiction. It chronicles the life of Orlando, who changes sex from male to female within the novel, spanning centuries and beginning in the Elizabethan era.
Há 3 dias · 1- La inspiración para Orlando. La escritora inglesa Vita Sackville-West pertenecía al círculo social de Virginia Woolf. Venía de una familia aristocrática y era abiertamente bisexual. Ella y Virginia Woolf mantuvieron un romance que duró años. Cuando Woolf empezó a escribir Orlando, escribió a Sackville-West que la novela era “todo ...
Há 2 dias · Adeline Virginia Woolf (/ w ʊ l f /; née Stephen; 25 January 1882 – 28 March 1941) was an English writer. She is considered one of the most important modernist 20th-century authors. She pioneered the use of stream of consciousness as a narrative device.
Há 2 dias · Avec Orlando, roman écrit en 1928 par l’autrice britannique féministe Virginia Woolf, surgissait le premier héros trans de la littérature. Traversant les genres mais aussi les siècles, Orlando y faisait la double expérience du monde comme homme puis comme femme, du XVIe siècle élisabéthain jusqu’au temps de l’écriture, ici sous les traits translucides de l’actrice Tilda Swinton.
Há 1 dia · Quando a produtora Arte chegou a ele com a ideia de um projeto de documentário sobre sua vida e obra, Preciado respondeu: "Façam uma adaptação de Orlando, de Virginia Woolf. Há cem anos, ela ...
Há 2 dias · Virginia Woolf’s satirical, prescient novel Orlando, published in 1928, is a groundbreaking work that explores themes of gender, identity, and time. The narrative features a nobleman named Orlando who lives over three centuries, beginning in the Elizabethan era and ending in the twentieth century, and, remarkably, changes from man to woman at the midpoint.
Há 2 dias · In 1928, Virginia Woolf published Orlando, in which the gender roles of the protagonist switch: Orlando’s amorous inclinations change frequently, as do her/his clothes, which are used to identify, conceal, reveal, and disguise gender.