Chapter 1
Virginia Woolf
Woolf's assertion challenges the conventions of her time, when women were often denied financial independence and personal space. By 1929, the world was still largely indifferent to the structural barriers women faced in literary fields. Woolf insists that the material means to freedom are essential for creative production. Her call for "a room of her own" is both literal and figurative—advocating for a private, undisturbed space where a woman's intellectual life can thrive.