Moving Mothers of Women: Virginia Woolf Simone de Beauvoir, and Motherhood in Motion

Authors

  • Luca Pinelli Università degli studi di Bergamo-Université Sorbonne Nouvelle

Keywords:

Virginia Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir, Feminism, Matrilinearity, Reception

Abstract

This article builds and expands on the notion that Virginia Woolf and Simone de Beauvoir are the ‘mothers’ of second-wave feminisms. It comprises three interrelated movements. First, Simone de Beauvoir’s paraphrase of Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own is explored, in particular through the ‘myth’ of Judith Shakespeare. This movement naturally leads to a discussion of the women’s literature anthologies of the 1970s and 80s in the United States. An intermezzo attempts to show the inherent plurality of the category of ‘second-wave feminism’ by mapping Beauvoir’s trajectory in France, the United States, and Britain, beyond the rather long shadow of a feminism of difference. The third and final movement investigates the reception of Woolf and Beauvoir among second-wave feminist critics and activists through the notion of ‘feminist Bible’ and through that of matrilinearity.
By adopting an overtly transnational perspective, this article shows how the very idea of (intellectual) motherhood ought to be understood in its border-crossings and its movements across time, space, languages, and disciplines.

Author Biography

Luca Pinelli, Università degli studi di Bergamo-Université Sorbonne Nouvelle

After studying at Oxford and Bologna, Luca Pinelli is currently completing a PhD in Transcultural Studies in the Humanities at the University of Bergamo, in cotutelle with Université Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris. His doctoral project investigates the intersections and resonances between Virginia Woolf’s late literary production and Simone de Beauvoir’s early philosophy and literary theory. His research interests include Oscar Wilde and the English fin de siècle, English modernism from a transnational and transdisciplinary perspective, women’s history and feminist theory (especially Virginia Woolf and Simone de Beauvoir), and queer theory. 

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Published

30-12-2023

How to Cite

Pinelli, L. (2023). Moving Mothers of Women: Virginia Woolf Simone de Beauvoir, and Motherhood in Motion. Elephant & Castle, (31). Retrieved from https://elephantandcastle.unibg.it/index.php/eac/article/view/476