Books of Some Substance podcast

115 - To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

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What does it mean to make meaning in an indifferent universe?

In this episode, we (Nathan and David) are talking Virginia Woolf's 1927 masterpiece To the Lighthouse, a novel where almost nothing "happens" and yet everything does. All of life is here.

We talk about Woolf's stream-of-consciousness mastery and her uncanny ability to move between minds; Mrs. Ramsay as the magnetic, self-negating center of the novel; the famous "wedge-shaped core of darkness;" the ruthless, primordial "Time Passes" section; and Lily Briscoe's revelation that art is an act of perception, not creation (and not just because her art sounds like it is bad).

Along the way: beehives, terrible daffodils, the window as a frame against chaos, and whether you have to go to the lighthouse to arrive at the lighthouse.

Chapters: 0:00 – Opening Quote & Introduction

0:48 – "Nothing Was Simply One Thing"

1:56 – The Plot (Such as It Is)

4:22 – Characters, Haunted Hives, & Grotesque Notions

6:13 – Mrs. Ramsay: The Wedge-Shaped Core of Darkness at the Center of Everything

8:50 – Mr. Ramsay: Tyrant, Philosopher, & Deeply Needy Man 

19:15 – The Marriage: Triumph Without Saying "I Love You"

22:52 – She Who Knows: Mrs. Ramsay's Singular Perception

24:57 – Time Stands Still: The Dinner Party, the Window & Making Moments Into Eternity

29:44 – Time Passes: Nature's Indifference, the Brutality of Brackets & a House Left to Rot

38:08 – To the Lighthouse: Distance, Perception & Two Ways of Apprehending the World

46:37 – Art as Perception: The Miserable Machine & the Miraculous Chair

52:19 – The Wedge Core, Lily's Revelation & Virginia Woolf's Hidden Buddhism

55:26 – What Will Stay With Us: Terrible Daffodils, Tansley in Love & the Nowness of Everything

55:28 – Recommendations: Mrs. Dalloway, Ulysses & Light Years

1:00:27 – Final Thoughts & Next Book

 

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