Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/47371
Title: The appeal to audience through figures of thought in Virginia Woolf's feminist essays
Authors: Sánchez Cuervo, Margarita Esther 
UNESCO Clasification: 6202 Teoría, análisis y crítica literarias
Keywords: Virginia Woolf
Rhetorical figures
Constructing intentions
Interactions
Attitudes
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: 0034-4346
Journal: Renascence 
Abstract: This article discusses the presence of figures of thought in some well-known feminist essays by Virginia Woolf. The novelist and essayist was especially sensitive to the challenging situation of women throughout history as far as their personal and professional desire for equality in a male-centered society was concerned. Woolf tries to make readers aware of her feminist views by using expressive resources like figures of speech or schemes, tropes and figures of thought in her writing. Figures of thought can be defined as those specific gestures which are designed to interact with the audience. Their use is connected with the functional use of language in the sense that they may draw readers’ attention away from the textual content and toward the context. Since the essays chosen for this study were first read aloud or were written in the form of letters before being published, the appeal to audience may be more deliberate and thus effective. The figures analyzed are enallage of person, erotema, ecphonesis, prosopopeia, aposiopesis and prolepsis.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/47371
ISSN: 0034-4346
DOI: 10.5840/renascence20166829
Source: Renascence [ISSN 0034-4346], v. 68(2), p. 127-143
Appears in Collections:Artículos
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