During the Second World War many women writers sought to reconceptualize temporal relations. Often this was part of a fictional strategy of `writing oneself out' of the temporal reality of war. Virginia Woolf and Elizabeth Bowen propose strongly contrasting conceptions of this alternative time, but both imagine a `women's time' that is other to the patriarchal linear temporality perceived as the time of war.
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Plain, Gill (1993) `Strategies for Survival: Fiction and Reality in British Women's Writing of the Second World War', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
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Shires, Linda M.
(1985) British Poetry of the Second World War. London: Macmillan.
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Spivak, Gayatry Chakravorty
(1991) `French Feminism in an International Context', in T. Eagleton (ed.) Feminist Literary Criticism. London: Longman.
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Whitford, Margaret
(ed.) (1991) The Irigaray Reader. Oxford: Blackwell.
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Woolf, Virginia
(1928/1977) Orlando. London: Grafton.
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Woolf, Virginia
(1929/1977) A Room of One's Own. London: Grafton.
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Woolf, Virginia
(1937/1977) The Years. London: Grafton.
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Woolf, Virginia
(1938/1986) Three Guineas. London: Hogarth.
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Woolf, Virginia
(1941/1978) Between the Acts. London: Grafton.