Saturday, June 13, 2026

Dalloway Day


This Wednesday (June 17) is Dalloway Day, an annual celebration of Virginia Woolf’s 1925 modernist masterpiece, Mrs. Dalloway.

Dalloway Day takes place globally on the third Wednesday in June, commemorating the fictional day in mid-June 1923 when the protagonist, Clarissa Dalloway, famously walks through London to buy flowers for a party she’s hosting that night at her Westminster residence.

Through a stream-of-consciousness style that interweaves Clarissa’s experiences with those of other characters, most notably the shell-shocked veteran Septimus Smith, the novel explores not only Clarissa’s inner life, memories, and reflections on life, love, and death, but the social mores and structure of post-World War One England.

Ahead of Dalloway Day, here’s a fascinating 30-minute documentary by award-winning writer and academic Alexandra Harris that explores how Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway “completely re-imagined what a novel might be.”





Related Off-site Links:
Mrs. Dalloway at 100 – Daphne Merkin (Air Mail, September 13, 2025).
Mrs. Dalloway: Secularism and Its Enchantments – Jared Marcel Pollen (Quillette, September 2, 2021).
Clarissa Dalloway’s and Septimus Smith’s Routes Through LondonBritish Literature Wiki.

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Vanessa Redgrave: “Almost a Kind of Jungian Actress”
Something We Dare Call Hope

Image: Vanessa Redgrave as the title character in the 1997 film adaptation of Mrs. Dalloway.


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