Virginia Woolf and Childhood with Literature Cambridge
Clare Hall Fellow Commoner Ann Kennedy Smith will be giving a talk on Virginia Woolf and Julian Bell at Waterstones Cambridge. This talk is in collaboration with Literature Cambridge and their summer course on Virginia Woolf and Childhood.
Book your spot on the Waterstones website!
Ann Kennedy Smith is a writer, researcher, and literary critic. She grew up in Ballycastle, County Antrim and gained her first degree in French and German (joint honours) at Trinity College Dublin. She began her studies at Queens’ College Cambridge in 1985, and received her PhD on Charles Baudelaire’s art criticism in 1990. She then worked as a dictionary editor at Cambridge University Press as part of the team who created the first Cambridge International Dictionary of English, and later taught literature and art history at the Workers’ Educational Association and the Institute of Continuing Education at University of Cambridge.
Her essays and reviews have been published in the Guardian, Times Literary Supplement, Slightly Foxed magazine, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Journal of Victorian Culture, English Review and History Today. She is a member of Clare Hall Art Committee.
Literature Cambridge is an independent educational organisation providing top-quality courses taught by leading academics on the best of Classical literature and literature in English.