@article{oai:dwcla.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000202, author = {今村, 梨沙 and IMAMURA, Risa}, journal = {Asphodel, アスフォデル}, month = {Jul}, note = {application/pdf, AN00000289-20110726-65, A Room of One's Own (1929) is one of the most famous feminist essays written by Virginia Woolf (1882-1941). In this essay, she emphasizes the importance of having both of her own money and room in order to be an emancipated woman. While she encourages women's social advance, we notice that her writings display some contradictions. The purpose of this paper is to examine what drove Woolf into such conflicts, and how she dealt with and tried to solve them as a feminist. Woolf was raised in a patriarchal family with the nineteenth-century atmosphere. Though she became critical of the then-ideal image of 'the Angel in the House,' she failed to overcome the Victorian tradition which had haunted her for a long time. She was afraid of the blame for her feminist challenge by the people who had the patriarchal point of view. Moreover, she thought it was ideal for a woman writer to have both of male and female factors, in short, to be androgynous; she insisted on the significance of androgyny and admired the androgynous without searching for the meaning of 'femaleness.' On the whole, we can regard Virginia Woolf as a feminist who had contradictions and could not break through the barrier of social class at least until 1928, when she wrote A Room of One's Own.}, pages = {65--84}, title = {Virginia Woolfのフェミニストとしての成長過程 : A Room of One's Ownを中心として}, volume = {46}, year = {2011}, yomi = {イマムラ, リサ} }