But she [Virginia Woolf] is impotently distant from an understanding of the proper relations between literature and society, because she has no clear sense of the functions of literature. She sees writers as individual 'artists' working in mysterious privacy - which from time to time society rudely invades. Her writer, indeed, has all the characteristics of traditional 'femininity' - with society as the big strong male who should protect and cherish his literary womenfolk, but does not. She might - for all the application of her complaint to the relations between society and literature - be talking of the relations between husbands and wives.


Laura Riding and Harry Kemp from The Left Heresy in Literature and Life (London: Methuen, 1939)


But she [Virginia Woolf] is impotently distant from an understanding of the proper relations between literature and society, because she has no clear ...

But she [Virginia Woolf] is impotently distant from an understanding of the proper relations between literature and society, because she has no clear ...

But she [Virginia Woolf] is impotently distant from an understanding of the proper relations between literature and society, because she has no clear ...

But she [Virginia Woolf] is impotently distant from an understanding of the proper relations between literature and society, because she has no clear ...