Discussion Questions
1. Clarissa
Vaughan is described several times as an "ordinary" woman. Do you
accept this valuation? If so, what does it imply about the ordinary,
about being ordinary? What makes someone, by contrast, extraordinary?
2. Flowers and floral imagery play a significant part in The Hours.
When and where are flowers described? What significance do they have,
and with what events and moods are they associated? How do flowers
affect Virginia? Clarissa?
3. Cunningham plays with the notions of sanity and insanity,
recognizing that there might be only a very fine line between the two
states. What does the novel imply about the nature of insanity? Might it
in fact be a heightened sanity, or at least a heightened sense of
awareness? Would you classify Richard as insane? How does his mental
state compare with that of Virginia? Of Laura as a young wife? Of
Septimus Smith in Mrs. Dalloway? Does insanity (or the received idea of insanity) appear to be connected with creative gifts?
4. Virginia and Laura are both, in a sense, prisoners of their eras
and societies, and both long for freedom from this imprisonment.
Clarissa Vaughan, on the other hand, apparently enjoys every liberty:
freedom to be a lesbian, to come and go and live as she likes. Yet she
has ended up, in spite of her unusual way of life, as a fairly
conventional wife and mother. What might this fact indicate about the
nature of society and the restrictions it imposes? Does the author imply
that character, to a certain extent, is destiny?
5. Each of the novel's three principal women, even the relatively
prosaic and down-to-earth Clarissa, occasionally feels a sense of
detachment, of playing a role. Laura feels as if she is "about to go
onstage and perform in a play for which she is not appropriately
dressed, and for which she has not adequately rehearsed" [p. 43].
Clarissa is filled with "a sense of dislocation. This is not her kitchen
at all. This is the kitchen of an acquaintance, pretty enough but not
her taste, full of foreign smells" [p. 91]. Is this feeling in fact a
universal one? Is role-playing an essential part of living in the world,
and of behaving "sanely"? Which of the characters refuses to act a
role, and what price does he/she pay for this refusal?
6. Who kisses whom in The Hours, and what is the significance of each kiss?
7. The Hours is very much concerned with creativity and the
nature of the creative act, and each of its protagonists is absorbed in a
particular act of creation. For Virginia and Richard, the object is
their writing; for Clarissa Vaughan (and Clarissa Dalloway), it is a
party; for Laura Brown, it is another party, or, more generally, "This
kitchen, this birthday cake, this conversation. This revived world" [p.
106]. What does the novel tell us about the creative process? How does
each character revise and improve his or her creation during the course
of the story?
8. How might Richard's childhood experiences have made him the adult
he eventually becomes? In what ways has he been wounded, disturbed?
9. Each of the three principal women is acutely conscious of her
inner self or soul, slightly separate from the "self" seen by the world.
Clarissa's "determined, abiding fascination is what she thinks of as
her soul" [p. 12]; Virginia "can feel it inside her, an all but
indescribable second self, or rather a parallel, purer self. If she were
religious, she would call it the soul.... It is an inner faculty that
recognizes the animating mysteries of the world because it is made of
the same substance" [pp. 34-35]. Which characters keep these inner
selves ruthlessly separate from their outer ones? Why?
10. Each of the novel's characters sees himself or herself, most of
the time, as a failure. Virginia Woolf, as she walks to her death,
reflects that "She herself has failed. She is not a writer at all,
really; she is merely a gifted eccentric" [p. 4]. Richard, disgustedly,
admits to Clarissa, "I thought I was a genius. I actually used that
word, privately, to myself" [p. 65]. Are the novel's characters unusual,
or are such feelings of failure an essential and inevitable part of the
human condition?
11. Toward the end of Clarissa's day, she realizes that kissing
Richard beside the pond in Wellfleet was the high point, the
culmination, of her life. Richard, apparently, feels the same. Are we
meant to think, though, that their lives would have been better, more
heightened, had they stayed together? Or does Cunningham imply that as
we age we inevitably feel regret for some lost chance, and that what we
in fact regret is youth itself?
12. The Hours could on one level be said to be a novel about
middle age, the final relinquishment of youth and the youthful self.
What does middle age mean to these characters? In what essential ways do
these middle-aged people — Clarissa, Richard, Louis, Virginia — differ
from their youthful selves? Which of them resists the change most
strenuously?
13. What does the possibility of death represent to the various
characters? Which of them loves the idea of death, as others love life?
What makes some of the characters decide to die, others to live? What
personality traits separate the "survivors" from the suicides?
14. If you have read Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, would you describe The Hours as a modern version of it? A commentary upon it? A dialogue with it? Which characters in The Hours
correspond with those of Woolf's novel? In what ways are they similar,
and at what point do the similarities cease and the characters become
freestanding individuals in their own right?
15. For the most part, the characters in The Hours have either a different gender or a different sexual orientation from their prototypes in Mrs. Dalloway. How much has all this gender-bending affected or changed the situations, the relationships, and the people?
16. Why has Cunningham chosen The Hours for the title of his novel (aside from the fact that it was Woolf's working title for Mrs. Dalloway)? In what ways is the title appropriate, descriptive? What do hours mean to Richard? To Laura? To Clarissa?
(Questions issued by publisher.)
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