The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf was a keen preserver of some Victorian values, and among these the art of Charles Dickens, with his representation of London, its voices, sounds, music and noises. Dickens’s Little Dorrit and its closing sentence opens up my critical track by suggesting that Woolf’s reconstruction of...

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Main Author: Francesca Orestano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2021-01-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/9870
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author Francesca Orestano
author_facet Francesca Orestano
author_sort Francesca Orestano
collection DOAJ
description Virginia Woolf was a keen preserver of some Victorian values, and among these the art of Charles Dickens, with his representation of London, its voices, sounds, music and noises. Dickens’s Little Dorrit and its closing sentence opens up my critical track by suggesting that Woolf’s reconstruction of the past must give to Victorian sounds a role that is neither ancillary nor merely impressionistic. This article focuses on Woolf’s portrayal of Victorian urban life in her fiction, especially in The Years (1937), where London sounds are everywhere present and deployed to create the polyphony—an exciting cacophony in modernist terms—of the great city. In Woolf’s fiction sounds are meant to convey symbolic meanings, to bring myth to the foreground, while also adding to the realism of the text. Sounds function like the many voices of an organ—the baroque instrument par excellence—suggesting at once order and chaos, norm and transgression: they frame representation and yet also break the frame by directly affecting the reader. This effect of discordia concors as acoustic experience is implemented within the verbal context, emphasizing the dialogic relationship between the source of sound, its reception, and the performative function sounds obtain within the texture of The Years.
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spelling doaj-art-490fee38cff04505bec3abe4174286552025-01-30T10:21:12ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492021-01-019410.4000/cve.9870The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia WoolfFrancesca OrestanoVirginia Woolf was a keen preserver of some Victorian values, and among these the art of Charles Dickens, with his representation of London, its voices, sounds, music and noises. Dickens’s Little Dorrit and its closing sentence opens up my critical track by suggesting that Woolf’s reconstruction of the past must give to Victorian sounds a role that is neither ancillary nor merely impressionistic. This article focuses on Woolf’s portrayal of Victorian urban life in her fiction, especially in The Years (1937), where London sounds are everywhere present and deployed to create the polyphony—an exciting cacophony in modernist terms—of the great city. In Woolf’s fiction sounds are meant to convey symbolic meanings, to bring myth to the foreground, while also adding to the realism of the text. Sounds function like the many voices of an organ—the baroque instrument par excellence—suggesting at once order and chaos, norm and transgression: they frame representation and yet also break the frame by directly affecting the reader. This effect of discordia concors as acoustic experience is implemented within the verbal context, emphasizing the dialogic relationship between the source of sound, its reception, and the performative function sounds obtain within the texture of The Years.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/9870Dickens (Charles)musicWoolf (Virginia)Victorian soundscapeLondon soundscries
spellingShingle Francesca Orestano
The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Dickens (Charles)
music
Woolf (Virginia)
Victorian soundscape
London sounds
cries
title The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf
title_full The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf
title_fullStr The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf
title_full_unstemmed The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf
title_short The Roaring Streets: Dickensian London in the Pages of Virginia Woolf
title_sort roaring streets dickensian london in the pages of virginia woolf
topic Dickens (Charles)
music
Woolf (Virginia)
Victorian soundscape
London sounds
cries
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/9870
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