Hello, how are you? Welcome to this podcast, from the Canary Islands to the world.
This is a literary journey without borders. Each episode explores a work, an author, or a literary movement from different corners of the planet. Because books are also passports, and each story brings us closer to different cultures, languages, and realities.
A member of the influential Bloomsbury Group, Woolf was a critical and avant-garde voice who challenged Victorian conventions.
Her work has inspired generations of writers, feminist thinkers, and literary theorists.
- She is considered one of the most important authors in the English language, and her influence extends beyond literature, touching on philosophy, art, and politics.
- Identity and Gender: Works like Orlando explore the fluidity of gender and question social norms.
- The Female Condition: In essays like A Room of One's Own, Woolf reflects on the role of women in literature and the need for intellectual independence.
- The transience of life: In To the Lighthouse, for example, death, the passage of time, and memory are central themes.
- Social consciousness and existentialism: Her work is imbued with a sensitivity toward human dilemmas, alienation, and the search for meaning.
And with that, I conclude today's episode. See you in the next one!
If you have any comments or suggestions for future episodes, please leave me a comment.
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