Rationale A Room of One's Own (AROOO), Virginia Woolf's extended response to the initial stimulus statement of "Women and Fiction", discusses in depth the inequalities and stereotypes forced upon women, not only in fiction, but in the broader context of society. Woolf's constant use of parallelism throughout her essay further strengthens the argument of the disadvantages faced by women. ... Throughout the play, Woolf's use of shifting narrators signifies a universal representation of women, "Here then was I call me Mary Beton, Mary Seton, Mary Carmichael or b...