Post impressionism in To the Lighthouse
$4.95
literature
case study
date published 23/04/2008
review : not yet assessed
level : General public
requested 0 times
Very little endures in Virginia Woolfs To the Lighthouse; by the third book most of the characters have died tragic and largely overlooked deaths, or they have disappeared almost without mention. Only two characters, the neurotic philosopher Mr. Ramsay and the lone artist Lily Briscoe are central to the entire book. They are also both set apart from the other characters in another way; they are both disconnected from other people by their work. Their work is so deeply a part of them that they take on the characteristics of and become representative of their representative callings. Their interactions represent not only Virginia Woolfs views about the nature of art and truth, but also her feelings about the work itself.
Table of Contents
- Mr. Ramsay, in spite of being husband and father of eight, is not a family man.
- Lily Briscoe is also very disconnected from the other characters.
- Lily does not understand Mr. Ramsay's work.
- Mr. Ramsay constantly alienates people through his philosophy.
- Mrs. Ramsay and the Lighthouse both represent beauty.
- The distance sought by Lily in her painting has the opposite effect.
- Once Mr. Ramsay reaches the lighthouse and James thinks about him saying 'There is no God' Lily assumes they have landed.
- Woolf presents Gregorian writers such as Joyce and Elliot as having another problem.
- The novel To the Lighthouse itself depicts the struggle of its own creation.
