Lexington Books
Pages: 208
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-2555-7 • Hardback • December 2008 • $109.00 • (£84.00)
Teresa Prudente is a research fellow in the department of comparative literature at the University of Turin in Italy.
1 Contents
2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 Introduction
Part 4 I. "It's Ecstasy that Matters"
Chapter 5 1. Contemplation, Solitude, Love
Chapter 6 2. Memory and A-linear Time
Chapter 7 3. Ecstasy and Emptiness
Part 8 II. "If Only I Could Write!"
Chapter 9 4. Ecstasy and Ineffability
Chapter 10 5. The Artistic Re-Creation of Ecstasy
Part 11 III. "Communication is Health"
Chapter 12 6. A-linear Time and Stream of Consciousness
Chapter 13 7. "The Caves Shall Connect": Polyphony and Decentering Woolf and Gide
Chapter 14 8. "To Be Continuing to Live": A-linear Time and the Novel
15 Bibliography
16 Index
17 About the Author
A Specially Tender Piece of Eternity is a critically scrupulous and imaginative analysis of Woolf's revolutionary representation of time as non-linear, fluid, fugitive and—at certain 'ecstatic' moments—transcendent. Prudente's somewhat surprising emphasis on the ecstatic foundations of Woolf's representations of everyday sensations and experiences is a welcome contribution to Woolf criticism.
— Maria DiBattista, Princeton University
Teresa Prudente's A Specially Tender Piece of Eternity: Virginia Woolf and the Experience of Time offers a remarkably nuanced analysis of perception, emotion and recollection in Woolf's work. The volume seamlessly intertwines sophisticated philosophical inquiry into the workings of the mind with meticulously close readings of Woolf's To the Lighthouse, Orlando and Mrs. Dalloway, as well as key essays such as "Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown" and "The Russian Point of View," and personal writings including "A Sketch of the Past." Significantly deepening our understanding of Woolf's complex fascination with intense states of awareness and the ineffable mystery of time, Prudente deftly traces the links between Woolf's own life-altering experiences and her techniques for infusing her literary work with these revelatory elements of rapture, incandescence, immediacy, and interconnectedness.
— Vara Neverow, professor of English at Southern Connecticut State University and past president of the International Virginia Woolf Society
One of the significant qualities of Teresa Prudente's book is its careful and sustained grounding in Woolf's statements about time and fiction in her essays, and, more significantly, in close attention to the content, style, and structure in her novels.
— Woolf Studies Annual