Virginia Woolf And Alice Walker

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Though significant leaders in their similarly skeptical commentary on the confined conditions of women, Virginia Woolf and Alice Walker offer two disputably distinct—even sometimes contentious—discourses on contemporary feminism. Walker openly criticizes Woolf’s narrow audience that pertains to presumably only white upper-class women, whereas Walker voices her concerns for women in In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens by specifically integrating the inclusion of black women who Woolf fails to recognize in A Room of One’s Own. It is important to keep in consideration the historical context in which the two women wrote: Woolf in the 1920’s and Walker in the 1980’s. Woolf’s viewpoint may have been limited due to an inability to resonate with the struggles of colored women (being that Woolf’s an upper-class-born white woman), or Woolf still had to restrict herself in her own free writing with foresight that she could …show more content…

What then are we to make of Phillis Wheatley, a slave, who owned not even herself? This sickly, frail black girl . . . who, had she been white, would have been easily considered the intellectual superior of all the women and most of the men in the society of her day,” (Gilbert 1298).
Walker essentially commends Woolf for their shared emphases on the past disadvantages women faced, but Walker at the same time is noting that one should not exclude the greater disadvantages in which women of color were subjected to endure. By excluding a certain group of women as a “feminist critic,” the ignorance of the patriarchy—a WHITE hierarchy—is only being

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