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Rash Reading: Rethinking Virginia Woolf's On Being Ill
Author(s) -
Sarah Pett
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
literature and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.159
H-Index - 18
eISSN - 1080-6571
pISSN - 0278-9671
DOI - 10.1353/lm.2019.0001
Subject(s) - argument (complex analysis) , context (archaeology) , reading (process) , expansive , value (mathematics) , sociology , meaning (existential) , relevance (law) , critical reading , representation (politics) , aesthetics , literature , epistemology , history , law , politics , medicine , philosophy , art , political science , compressive strength , materials science , archaeology , machine learning , computer science , composite material
Virginia Woolf's On Being Ill (1926) is the first published essay in English on illness in literature. Historically neglected, in recent years rising popular and academic interest in the intersection of illness and the arts has led to a rediscovery of sorts, exemplified by its republication by Paris Press in 2002 and 2012. And yet, in spite of this surge in attention, contemporary writers and scholars routinely undervalue the scope of Woolf's argument about illness and its literary representation. By placing On Being Ill within a wider context of writing and reading illness in the modern and contemporary period, my study opens up hitherto unexplored dimensions of the essay, arguing for a more expansive understanding of the critical and creative interventions it seeks to make, and a new appreciation of its relevance to present day debates around the meaning and value of illness in literature.

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