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Philosophy and Literature: Virginia Woolf, Epiphanies, and the Modernist Novel with Prof. Andrew Huddleston Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame

Date
Tue May 20th 2025, 6:30 - 8:00pm
Event Sponsor
Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages
Location
Building 260, Pigott Hall
450 Jane èצӰÏñ Way, Building 260, èצӰÏñ, CA 94305
Room 252

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A Discussion with Prof. Andrew Huddleston Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame for a talk on Virginia Woolf, Epiphanies, and the Modernist Novel

The second and third decades of the 20th century saw the publication of some of the greatest works of literary modernism, with the groundbreaking novels of Proust, Joyce, and Woolf. None of these writers, by the time of their artistic maturity, were religious in any conventional sense. Yet despite this shared rejection of religion, and to some degree outright hostility to it, all three writers, as has often been noticed, centrally thematize in their work a concept that is familiar from a religious context—namely, that of the epiphany, recast in a secular form. For Proust and for the early Joyce, the epiphany has a transformative, salvific trajectory: as the religious epiphany pointed one to a new life in God, the aesthetic epiphany points toward a new life in art. With Proust and the early Joyce established as points of comparison, Huddleston turns to consider the work of Virginia Woolf, focusing his discussion on Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse. While the epiphany, in secular form, is a notable feature of these novels, Woolf’s treatment, Huddleston suggests, is more critical and less grandly redemptive. For Woolf doesn’t simply keep the epiphanic experiential structure (vision heralding redemptive life transformation) and transfer it to a new this-worldly object. Rather, she queries that experiential structure itself, and makes it, and its implications, less determinate. Woolfean epiphanies are powerful yet also questionable, suggestive but not clearly directive, vaguely promissory but not salvific. They take a cue from religion, but interrogate it and move beyond it, into a sphere more deeply informed by the open-ended character of art. 


Andrew Huddleston specializes in 19th and 20th century European philosophy as well as in aesthetics, ethics, and social philosophy. Before moving to Notre Dame in 2025, he taught for a number of years in the UK, first at Exeter College, Oxford, then Birkbeck College, University of London, and finally the University of Warwick. In 2022, he was Visiting Faculty at Princeton University, where he was Whitney J. Oates Fellow in the Council of the Humanities. He is an Editorial Committee member and Book Reviews Editor of the European Journal of Philosophy. He is currently completing a book titled Art's Highest Calling: The Religion of Art in a Secular Age, and is beginning a new book project tentatively titled A Home in the World.