An Audience Members Perspective on A Room of Ones Own Jordan Reid BerkowWomens LiteratureLambertSeptember 19,1998An Audience Members Perspective on A Room of Ones Own A youthful, female peruser of Virginia Woolfs A Room of Ones Own would encounter a variety of passionate reactions to the creator, running from compassion to threatening vibe. Despite the fact that Woolf is keeping in touch with simply such a group of people with an end goal to urge young ladies to compose fiction, her contention is frequently self-conflicting and in any case loaded with gaps. As a young lady in especially a similar social circumstance the same number of Woolfs audience members would have been, I find numerous defects inside the composing that may have estranged the very ladies whom she was attempting to rouse. Woolf starts A Room of Ones Own brilliantly, thinking about the idea of her crowd. It is quickly evident that she is composing for a lady, not for a man.

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