I have been in awe of Virginia Woolf and her writing for years. Reading Louise DeSalvo's book brought my awe into clearer perspective, i.e. realizing how strong and powerful a writer Woolf was and that her preoccupations are related to mine as a writer. She wrote about women's experience, especially during childhood and adolescence, and how women have been treated by men (and still are by many men), and their powerlessness. As I read, I thought of my father who had been raised in a patriarchal nuclear family and espoused much of the Victorian attitudes and beliefs DeSalvo (and Woolf) describes regarding male superiority and female inferiority. So Woolf's experience was all too familiar to me.
If you only know that Virginia Woolf was a Bloomsbury writer who committed suicide, then you'll be in for an interesting, shocking read with DeSalvo's book. She does an excellent job, however, of showing how Woolf's personal experience emerges in her writing, and just how loudly she spoke out about sexual and physical violence against women, and child neglect by both mothers and fathers in upper middle class Victorian families. As continues to be true today still, the perpetrators dismissed Woolf's claims, pointing to her "illness" and saying that she was "mad." It was convenient for the men in Woolf's life that she exhibited all the symptoms commonly seen in young women who have been sexually abused -- they could point to them and say Woolf was insane, that it was all in her head, and insure that they'd be blameless.
Today, those symptoms of Woolf's would probably be diagnosed as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder with Depression, acknowledging the psychological trauma of the sexual abuse she endured. We have made some progress, I guess. Woolf believed, and DeSalvo affirms, that her writing was not only a way to cope with what she'd endured but also a path to psychological healing, to learning who she truly was, and her true self worth. She still suffered from painful and powerful self-doubt, however, periods of depression, and severe, incapacitating headaches.
I think this book is an extremely important one for gender studies, and especially for men to read to learn about what they should not do. I'm not convinced, however, that men have made much progress in America or abroad from what Woolf and DeSalvo describe during Woolf's lifetime. Men still want to control women, to dominate them, to subjugate them, and to blame them for all their problems, at least in my experience. Fortunately, I have become acquainted with some men who have matured psychologically and emotionally beyond what is seen in this book. There are too few of them, however.
Because DeSalvo does such an excellent job of connecting Woolf's life experiences with what she wrote, her book has made me want to read all of what Woolf wrote and return and re-read what I've already read. It will certainly be interesting on an additional level now, knowing more about Woolf's life experience and how it became the inspiration and basis for her work. I am really glad that I invested in all of Woolf's Diaries and Letters years ago, and some of her novels, essays, and short stories.
I highly, highly recommend this book to readers of Woolf, literary fiction, those interested in Victorian life and Bloomsbury, and readers interested in the creative process. It will be eye-opening for some, but I think readers also interested in feminism, women's liberation, and men's liberation would also find this book especially interesting. Woolf was a strong advocate for education for women to enable them to be free of male domination, and for a change in teaching both boys and girls in order to stop war, fascism, and nationalism. She was definitely ahead of her time.