Russell, Richard Rankin.Wiedenfeld, Logan.2011-09-142017-04-072011-09-142017-04-072011-082011-09-14http://hdl.handle.net/2104/8248In the following thesis, I will examine Virginia Woolf's often contentious views concerning the theory and execution of biography. By focusing on the epistemology adumbrated in her essays and fiction, I will argue that the problem of biography, particularly the inability of the biographer to truly "know" the biographee, as is handedly demonstrated in the novel Jacob’s Room, is for Woolf intractable. Her only solution is to introduce the foreign and ultimately destructive element of fiction; for it is only by means of fiction, Woolf contends, that the biographer can approximate the unwieldy and evanescent kind of "life" the biography purports to illuminate. However, the introduction of fiction into the fact-grounded biography brings with it its own set of epistemological problems, namely, the superimposition of the biographer’s own sense of life onto that of the biographee, thus adulterating the biography with traces of autobiography.en-USBaylor University theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. Contact librarywebmaster@baylor.edu for inquiries about permission.Virginia Woolf.Biography.Jacob's Room.Orlando.Theory of biography.The "proper stuff" of biography : Woolf and the problem of the other in Jacob's Room and Orlando.ThesisWorldwide access.Access changed 6/27/13.