Rakhi Dalal's Reviews > Orlando
Orlando
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As always, Woolf has stunned me with the magic of her prose here. Telling this isn’t important, neither that it is a biography; that it informs us about the affair of Vita and Violet. I guess much has been said about that. When I started reading, I had no idea about the references to people, places, their characters or their lives as are known to be mentioned in this work. In fact, as the novel proceeded from Orlando’s gender change for the first time, I had a notion about the invisible layer of narrative which Virginia had experimented with, in this work. And as the work moved through centuries, I realized that the notion was making sense.
I didn’t even read it as something related to gender issues, though they might as well have been mentioned or portrayed deliberately, specially with reference to Pope, Addison and Swift.
To me, Orlando, in its truest sense renders the spirit of literature of the respective times it refers to, as it proceeds in time. The different centuries starting from Elizabethan and Jacobean to Restoration, Augustan, to Age of Sensibility, Romanticism and finally to Victorian, have been depicted in the form of exploration of the human mind. In any age, as it holds true, the people are influenced by the spirit of the age, which in turn reflects in the literature of the respective age, so Orlando is one finest description of Zeitgeist.
Orlando’s love affair with Sasha symbolizes the passionate extremism of Elizabethan period, while his engagement with reading and writing poetry attributes to characteristics of Jacobean period. During Restoration period, Orlando is sent as an ambassador to Constantinople, whereas the Age of Enlightenment or Augustan lets her see right through the poets like Pope, Addison and Swift and makes her wonder at their foibles. In nineteenth century or the age of realism, Orlando, as a woman, realizes that she needs to marry to secure her social standing. Her marriage to Shelmerdine might actually be a depiction of the European Romantic movement reaching America in early nineteenth century.
The Victorian age, witness the coming of Orlando in terms of herself as a woman or a writer and thus represents the increased role of women as a reader as well as a writer during that age. And the present time i.e. 11th October 1928, when the novel is published, we observe that Orlando is happy with the changing times, that she has finally arrived there, which cannot be neglected for the fact that the work was published when Woolf’s writing was at its height in terms of its popularity.
I am in awe of Woolf for her eagerness and will to experiment with the style of prose and her aversion to the well accepted norms of written word during her times. A profound expression of her ideas about how to write, what to write and for whom to write i.e. the relationship between a writer and a reader, can be witnessed in her essay Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown.
I didn’t even read it as something related to gender issues, though they might as well have been mentioned or portrayed deliberately, specially with reference to Pope, Addison and Swift.
To me, Orlando, in its truest sense renders the spirit of literature of the respective times it refers to, as it proceeds in time. The different centuries starting from Elizabethan and Jacobean to Restoration, Augustan, to Age of Sensibility, Romanticism and finally to Victorian, have been depicted in the form of exploration of the human mind. In any age, as it holds true, the people are influenced by the spirit of the age, which in turn reflects in the literature of the respective age, so Orlando is one finest description of Zeitgeist.
Orlando’s love affair with Sasha symbolizes the passionate extremism of Elizabethan period, while his engagement with reading and writing poetry attributes to characteristics of Jacobean period. During Restoration period, Orlando is sent as an ambassador to Constantinople, whereas the Age of Enlightenment or Augustan lets her see right through the poets like Pope, Addison and Swift and makes her wonder at their foibles. In nineteenth century or the age of realism, Orlando, as a woman, realizes that she needs to marry to secure her social standing. Her marriage to Shelmerdine might actually be a depiction of the European Romantic movement reaching America in early nineteenth century.
The Victorian age, witness the coming of Orlando in terms of herself as a woman or a writer and thus represents the increased role of women as a reader as well as a writer during that age. And the present time i.e. 11th October 1928, when the novel is published, we observe that Orlando is happy with the changing times, that she has finally arrived there, which cannot be neglected for the fact that the work was published when Woolf’s writing was at its height in terms of its popularity.
I am in awe of Woolf for her eagerness and will to experiment with the style of prose and her aversion to the well accepted norms of written word during her times. A profound expression of her ideas about how to write, what to write and for whom to write i.e. the relationship between a writer and a reader, can be witnessed in her essay Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown.
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Reading Progress
November 11, 2013
–
Started Reading
November 11, 2013
– Shelved
November 12, 2013
–
27.08%
"Sunk for a long time in profound thoughts as to the value of obscurity, and the delight of having no name, but being like a wave which returns to the deep body of the sea; thinking how obscurity rids the mind of the
irk of envy and spite; how it sets running in the veins the free waters of generosity and magnanimity; and allows giving and taking without thanks offered or praise given..."
page
52
irk of envy and spite; how it sets running in the veins the free waters of generosity and magnanimity; and allows giving and taking without thanks offered or praise given..."
November 14, 2013
–
50.0%
"The man looks the world full in the face, as if it were made for his uses and fashioned to his liking. The woman takes a sidelong glance at it, full of subtlety, even of suspicion."
page
96
November 18, 2013
–
Finished Reading
November 20, 2013
– Shelved as:
favorites
November 20, 2013
– Shelved as:
woolf
November 21, 2013
– Shelved as:
bloomsbury
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Ian
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Nov 20, 2013 11:43AM

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Re your mention of that she seems happy with the situation in the 'present' time: I noticed that in Mrs Dalloway as well.
Mrs D mentions that although her generation is still bound to the old roles, her daughter's generation can become what they wish: Doctors, scientists, lawyers.
I remember reading that VW never quite got over the fact that she was not sent to school like her brothers but educated at home by her father.



Thanks,Ian. Her style remains her own irrespective of the age she is writing about. If you take a closer look at the writing, you can even notice her own views about the styles of different age.
I forgot to mention "Nick Green" in the review, who is an embodiment(as I perceived) of a writer, depicting the changes in financial status and lifestyle of writers from Jacobean period to that of Modern times. An engaging read.

Re your mention of that she seems happy with the..."
Thanks,Trav! You should read it :) It isn't much long.
Yes, it can be noticed through out her works that she specifically portrays both male and female characters in accord with the prevalent notions/ norms of the times and express discontent, sometimes, for what is expected of a woman. I so look forward to reading "A room of one's own".

Tell you what, I did give a thought to it :) But I think I still have to read a lot to be able to sit down and write.

Either "To the Lighthouse" or "Mrs. Dalloway". Though being a woman, I would any day recommend the latter :)

Thanks for your generous words,Dolors :)


Thanks,Samadrita! I do agree with you and that is what makes the GR experience so worthwhile!


Thanks, Garima! You are right about Woolf, she does engage reader impressively and it is a pleasure to read her :)

The list? Yes, it is funny indeed though even I don't agree much with it.


I am glad you enjoyed it,Tej!


Thanks, Samra :) GR sometimes doesn't give any notification about comments so I apologise having missed yours. I am glad you enjoyed reading it :)

Thank you so much,Henry :) It is good to see you after so long.