(1) Virginia Woolf's essay A Room of One's Own analyzes the reasons there have been few women writers throughout history. (2) Woolf argues women lacked the independence and private space ("a room of their own") necessary for writing, as well as the tradition of other female writers to look to as models. (3) Woolf also explores how societal expectations that women should be "angels of the house" and the lack of higher education for women created psychological barriers that discouraged women from becoming writers.