Chapter 6
Virginia Woolf
Woolf's declaration is a defiant insistence on the autonomy of thought and creativity, untethered by external constraints. In 1929, women were still wrestling with the aftermath of the suffrage movement and the intellectual confinement imposed by a male-dominated literary canon. Woolf challenges the notion that societal structures—like libraries closed to women—can truly limit the imagination. Her insight counters an era still struggling to recognize women's intellectual sovereignty, asserting that the mind's freedom transcends physical barriers.