标题: 文摘:Professions for Women 女人的职业(2) [打印本页] 作者: 幽幽草 时间: 2007-3-21 16:59 标题: 文摘:Professions for Women 女人的职业(2)
Those are the questions that I should like, had I time, to ask you. And indeed, if I have laid stress upon these professional experiences of mine, it is because I believe that they are, though in different forms, yours also. Even when the path is nominally open--when there is nothing to revert a woman from being a doctor, a lawyer, a civil servant--there are many phantoms and obstacles, as I believe, looming in her way. To discuss and define them is I think of great value and importance; for thus only can the labor be shared, the difficulties be solved. But besides this, it is necessary also to discuss the ends and the aims for which we are fighting, for which we are doing battle with these formidable obstacles. Those aims cannot be taken for granted; they must be perpetually questioned and examined. The whole position, as I see it--here in this hall surrounded by women practicing for the first time in history I know not how many different professions--is one of extraordinary interest and importance. You have won rooms of your own in the house hitherto exclusively owned by men. You are able, though not without great labor and effort, to pay the rent. You are earning your five hundred pounds a year. But this freedom is only a beginning; the room is your own, but it is still bare. It has to be furnished; it has to be decorated; it has to be shared. How are you going to furnish it, how are you going to decorate it? With whom are you going to share it, and upon what terms? These, I think are questions of the utmost importance and interest. For the first time in history you are able to ask them; for the first time you are able to decide for yourself what the answers should be. Willingly would I stay and discuss those questions and answers--but not tonight. My time is up; and I must cease.
Questions for Comprehension and Consideration
1. Woolf’s essay is titled “Professions for Women.” Which profession does she discuss in detail? What reasons does Woolf give for finding writing a comfortable profession for a woman to pursue? What do these reasons suggest about the relationship between women, their families, and the world of work? Woolf says, “Pianos and models, Paris, Vienna, and Berlin, masters and mistresses, are not needed by a writer.” What does she mean by saying that? What actually does the author want to emphasize in the first paragraph? Do you detect some bitterness in tone in the first paragraph? If you do, can you point out where it lies? What is left unsaid here?
2. What point does the writer make through the sardonic mention of her Persian cat in paragraph 2?
3. What metaphors are used in paragraph 3? Who is the Angel in the House? What is her main qualities? Why did the Angel become symbolic of the emotional trmoil Woolf experienced when trying to work ( writing reviews of men’s writing for instance)? Who or what does the Angel represent? Why does the author take great pains to describe the Angel and the killing of the Angel? What does the author want to tell her audience in this paragrph? Write a dialogue between Woolf and the Angel. Develop the connflict that leads up to the murder of the Angel and reveals what Woolf learns during the struggle.
4. In paragraph 4, Woolf asks, “What is a woman?” Explain her response to this question and then work on your own definition. Try also to answer the question “What is a man?” How is your definition different from your definition of a woman? How do you explain the discrepancies?
5. What problem did Woolf encounter when she moved from writing reviews to writing novels? How does she use the analogy of the “fisherman lying sunk in dreams” to explain the problem she was facing? Who does the fisherman represent? The line racing through the girl’s fingers? The smash? What is the “something hard” that the imagination smashes against?
5. What conclusion does the author come to in paragraph 6?
6. Note the relationship between paragraph 6 and paragraph 7. The author might well have stopped at paragraph 6 or after the fourth sentence of paragraph 7, but she goes on and introduces something new. What is it? How is the theme broadened and deepened at the end of the essay with the series of questions the author raises on the rooms women occupy (or will occupy) “in the house hitherto exclusively owned by men.” Woolf wrote “Professions for Women” in 1931; how would you answer her questions today, from the perspective of the 1990s?
7. How does the essay impress you as a whole? How does the last paragraph impress you? Give your reasons.