Elizabeth Tataw AyukAko
International Journal of Language, Literature and Culture (IJLLC), Vol-5,Issue-3, May - June 2025, Pages 117-127, 10.22161/ijllc.5.3.16
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Article Info: Received: 14 May 2025, Received in revised form: 07 Jun 2025, Accepted: 11 Jun 2025, Available online: 15 Jun 2025
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Virginia Woolf remains one of the most influential female British writers of the 20th century. Through a series of captivating novels, essays and lectures, she exerted strong influence on the burgeoning landscape of activists for female rights in her time and after. Her novels portrayed women in the chaotic psychological struggle for self-affirmation. Among her signature novels, To the Lighthouse captures the struggles of two women, Mrs. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe, as they navigate the complex world of men’s individual egos and their own personal traumas and fears. This paper focuses on how their psychological development parallels the development of and the complex narrative about women’s struggle for freedom. Woolf’s fight for freedom was animated by the desire to free the female self from the demands of male hegemony. It is a struggle to give the female body and mind a space of its own, not determined by the alpha male. The imposing presence of the alpha male in the likes of Mr. Ramsay, Charles Tansley and William Bankes parallels those of men such as Woolf’s father, her husband and the men in her own literary and social circles. To the Lighthouse is a bold move in the long line of attempts to denounce efforts to muscle women. This paper investigates the journey to the lighthouse as a walk to self-realization and to self-healing, wherein both Mrs. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe come to the realization that their autonomy is dependent on self-evaluation and assertion of self-importance.