The Scholar's Armchair

Virginia WOOLF’s Philosophy of Reality | Prof Thomas Nail

1 h 17 min · 17. maj 2026
episode Virginia WOOLF’s Philosophy of Reality | Prof Thomas Nail cover

Beskrivelse

What did Virginia Woolf really mean by her famous “moments of being”? Were they simply flashes of heightened consciousness… or was Woolf trying to reveal something deeper about reality itself? In this episode of The Scholar’s Armchair, I’m joined by philosopher Thomas Nail to discuss his fascinating new book The Philosophy of Virginia Woolf: Moments of Becoming. Nail argues that Woolf was not just a novelist of inner life, but a philosopher in her own right — one who saw reality not as made of fixed things, but of movement, flow, and interrelated processes. Together we explore: * Woolf’s “moments of being” * Why Nail calls them “moments of becoming” * Time, perception, and the unstable self * Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and The Waves * Woolf’s relevance to modern philosophy and new materialism * Whether literature can actually change how we perceive reality If you enjoy Virginia Woolf, modernism, philosophy, literary theory, or process thought, this conversation offers a fresh and deeply thought-provoking way into her work. ======================== Links: Thomas’s book: https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/philosophy-of-virginia-woolf-9781350526051/ Thomas’s university profile: https://liberalarts.du.edu/about/people/thomas-andrew-nail #VirginiaWoolf #Modernism #Philosophy #Literature #LiteraryTheory #ThomasNail #MrsDalloway #TheWaves #ToTheLighthouse #TheScholarsArmchair

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18 episoder

episode What does Metamodern Architecture look like? cover

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6. juni 20261 h 2 min
episode Why we are still telling the Odyssey story | Prof Joel P Christensen cover

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What makes Odysseus the most enduring figure in all of literature? In this episode of The Scholar’s Armchair, I’m joined by Joel P. Christensen to explore one of the most fascinating characters ever created: Odysseus. From Homer’s Odyssey to modern films, novels, and even war narratives, Odysseus has never stopped changing. He is a hero, a liar, a survivor, a strategist, and perhaps one of the first true antiheroes in Western literature. But why has this figure endured when so many others have faded? We explore how Odysseus has been reimagined across history, from ancient Greece to Dante Alighieri, and into modern culture, where he increasingly appears as a traumatised veteran struggling to return home. Along the way, we ask whether the Odyssey is not just a story about adventure, but one of the earliest explorations of identity, storytelling, and survival. If Achilles represents glory, Odysseus represents something closer to us: adaptability, contradiction, and the cost of making it back alive. Why do we keep returning to Odysseus? And what does that say about us? Topics include: The meaning of “the man of many ways” Odysseus as hero vs antihero How different cultures reinvent him Trauma, nostalgia, and the idea of home Why the Odyssey feels more modern than the Iliad Subscribe for more conversations with leading scholars bringing great literature to life. ================== Links: Joel's book Why Odysseus?: https://link.springer.com/book/9783032209863 Joel's profile page: https://www.gc.cuny.edu/people/joel-p-christensen

31. maj 202658 min
episode Why the Victorians Needed Jane AUSTEN | Prof Cheryl Wilson cover

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What did the Victorians really think of Jane Austen — and how did they reshape her legacy? In this episode of The Scholar’s Armchair, I speak with Prof Cheryl A. Wilson, author of *Jane Austen and the Victorian Heroine*, about the surprising afterlife of Austen in the nineteenth century. We often think of Austen as timeless — but as Dr Wilson shows, the Victorians didn’t just admire her. They *used* her. Through the figure of the heroine, Austen became a tool for thinking about reading, gender, class, and even national identity. We explore how Victorian writers: * turned Austen into a guide for “good reading” and moral taste * rewrote and adapted her heroines for a changing world * struggled with complex characters like Emma * used Austen in debates about femininity and the New Woman * transformed her into a cultural icon: “England’s Jane” We also discuss Dr Wilson’s fascinating work on *Persuasion*, where she argues that Austen structures the novel like a dance — even without a ballroom scene — revealing new insights into desire, movement, and social mobility. This conversation reveals a different Austen: not fixed, but constantly reinterpreted — and still shaping how we read today. --- Links: Cheryl's book Jane Austen and the Victorian Heroine: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-319-62965-0 Cheryl's article on dance and Persuasion: https://jasna.org/persuasions/printed/number25/wilson.pdf --- **Subscribe for more conversations with leading literary scholars exploring the big ideas behind classic literature.** #JaneAusten #VictorianLiterature #LiteraryCriticism #Persuasion #ClassicLiterature #Books #TheScholarsArmchair

24. maj 202641 min
episode Virginia WOOLF’s Philosophy of Reality | Prof Thomas Nail cover

Virginia WOOLF’s Philosophy of Reality | Prof Thomas Nail

What did Virginia Woolf really mean by her famous “moments of being”? Were they simply flashes of heightened consciousness… or was Woolf trying to reveal something deeper about reality itself? In this episode of The Scholar’s Armchair, I’m joined by philosopher Thomas Nail to discuss his fascinating new book The Philosophy of Virginia Woolf: Moments of Becoming. Nail argues that Woolf was not just a novelist of inner life, but a philosopher in her own right — one who saw reality not as made of fixed things, but of movement, flow, and interrelated processes. Together we explore: * Woolf’s “moments of being” * Why Nail calls them “moments of becoming” * Time, perception, and the unstable self * Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and The Waves * Woolf’s relevance to modern philosophy and new materialism * Whether literature can actually change how we perceive reality If you enjoy Virginia Woolf, modernism, philosophy, literary theory, or process thought, this conversation offers a fresh and deeply thought-provoking way into her work. ======================== Links: Thomas’s book: https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/philosophy-of-virginia-woolf-9781350526051/ Thomas’s university profile: https://liberalarts.du.edu/about/people/thomas-andrew-nail #VirginiaWoolf #Modernism #Philosophy #Literature #LiteraryTheory #ThomasNail #MrsDalloway #TheWaves #ToTheLighthouse #TheScholarsArmchair

17. maj 20261 h 17 min