Background & Content
Judith's Story
Theme & Ideas
100

Who is Virginia Woolf?

She's the author of Shakespeare's Sister.

100

What is becoming a writer or actor?

Judith runs away to London to pursue this dream.

100

What is gender inequality (or lack of education and opportunity)?

This is the main barrier that prevents Judith from achieving her potential. 

200

What is A Room of One's Own?

This essay first appeared in Woolf's famous extended essay about women and writing.

200

What is her gender?

When she arrives in London, Judith faces rejection because of this.
200

What is social oppression or patriarchy?

Woolf argues that countless women of talent have been lost to history because of this.

300

Who is Judith Shakespeare?

Woolf imagines this famous playwright's sister as equally talented but denied opportunity.

300

What is women's creative potential under oppression?

Woolf says Judith's tragic and symbolizes the death of this.

300

What is domesticity (or confinement)?

The story contrasts Shakespeare's freedom to create with his sister's enforced___.

400

What are money and a room of one's own?

The story explores the lack of these two things that Woolf says women need to write.

400

Who are women writers (or artists) of the future?

Despite her death, Woolf says Judith lives on in this generation of women. 

400

What is a room of one's own?

This symbolizes the independence and privacy necessary for creativity. 

500

What is fictionalization or creative speculation?

Woolf uses this literary technique-mixing fact with imagination-to make her argument. 

500

What is the historical silencing of women's genius?

Judith's life story parallels this broader social truth.

500

What are voices or contributions?

The story implies that the arts and history have traditionally excluded women's_____.

M
e
n
u