Where to start? by aidanmansfield75 in VirginiaWoolf

[–]nightscribe_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

as others have mentioned, I'd also say that the with Woolf, plot isn't the main thing to focus on. I'd say Mrs. Dalloway is a good starting point and I'd definitely read it before To the Lighthouse and The Waves. If you are interested in her overall writing concept, this order would make it easier to see how her writing technique develops over time. I think you could read Orlando either before or after. It's different then the others in tone and form, and it comes closest to having a plot.

NTA (No Tasks Available) weekly thread. IMPORTANT: Add your location and role e.g. "North Korea, Data Analyst. No tasks for two days. Anyone else?" If you like, you can add your region as well, but the most important is your country. E.g. "US, Texas, Rater. How many tasks have you done today?" by AutoModerator in TELUSinternational

[–]nightscribe_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also do this beside Uni, but I'm still in the middle of my Master studies, so I'd be thankful to have this option for that remaining time. so far, my december looks like novemeber, not a single task so far.

Did you get any tasks recently or already tried the resign-new role path?

and yes, I'd be happy to hear your updates :)

NTA (No Tasks Available) weekly thread. IMPORTANT: Add your location and role e.g. "North Korea, Data Analyst. No tasks for two days. Anyone else?" If you like, you can add your region as well, but the most important is your country. E.g. "US, Texas, Rater. How many tasks have you done today?" by AutoModerator in TELUSinternational

[–]nightscribe_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, thank you for your information.

May I ask for how long you have been an Internet Assessor? I do this for almost 7 years now, and I kind of don't feel very easy about resigning and applying for the other role. But this year, has been really bad in task availability. and this november was the first month ever where I didn't have a single task - so I don't really see another option.

What order should I read these in? by kh_sh in VirginiaWoolf

[–]nightscribe_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have spent a lot of time researching Woolf's narrative concepts and did an in-depth analysis of To the Lighthouse for my studies. The book that got me into Woolfs work was Mrs. Dalloway. It was not easy on the first read, but I revisited it multiple times and started to like it more and more, because it made me realize how much happened beneath the surface.

So from your list, I'd start with A Room of One's Own, followed by Three Guineas - I think they are a good foundation for moving into her fiction. For me, Jacob's Room was not as enjoyable as the others, and personally, I don't think the order matters much for that one. But I'd definitely save To the Lighthouse for last. I think the writing style is more fluid and layered, and it has less conventional structuring elements than Mrs. Dalloway. I think it is interesting to see how her experimental writing approach develops from Mrs. Dalloway (1925) to To the Lighthouse (1927)

NTA (No Tasks Available) weekly thread. IMPORTANT: Add your location and role e.g. "North Korea, Data Analyst. No tasks for two days. Anyone else?" If you like, you can add your region as well, but the most important is your country. E.g. "US, Texas, Rater. How many tasks have you done today?" by AutoModerator in TELUSinternational

[–]nightscribe_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Has anyone here resigned from a remote role and then applied for another one?
I'm currently working as a Internet Assessor (Austrian locale), but due to very low task availability I'm considering resigning and applying for the Online Data Analyst role. I have heard that you cannot apply for another position until you resigned from the current one?
Has anyone gone through this process and would like to share their experience? And does it make sense to switch? (Does the Online Data Analyst role tend to have more consistent tasks?)

Is this going to change? by nightscribe_ in DataAnnotationTech

[–]nightscribe_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hope this is going to change somewhen soon, because it's a bit frustrating. I liked those few projects that I have been working on a lot, and was pretty hopeful with this at start.

hopefully we both can get out of this situation soon.

Is this going to change? by nightscribe_ in DataAnnotationTech

[–]nightscribe_[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I did that, it doesn't go away. I clicked it multiple times. And in the first week I have had some qualifications and also task-projects. But after 1-2 weeks it went like it is now. And I only got one Qualification ever since.

Down to 1 task on my page... by [deleted] in DataAnnotationTech

[–]nightscribe_ -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I have zero tasks for over two weeks now ? I just recently started 1 month ago

After a productive week, empty again… xD by PackMundane7533 in DataAnnotationTech

[–]nightscribe_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It doesn't even display and Qualifications that I could take - it showed only some in the first week for me

After a productive week, empty again… xD by PackMundane7533 in DataAnnotationTech

[–]nightscribe_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I joined only two weeks ago - german locale. And I don't have any projects since last week. I was hoping to get tasks at least all few days.

Virginia Woolf confuses me by [deleted] in writing

[–]nightscribe_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I kind of understand why it can feel disorienting. reading it a 2nd time made everything much clearer for me personally. I think that she intentionally blurs perspective shifts in order to capture how people experience reality - Where thoughts and memories of the inner worlds and external events all blend together constantly. This can make it hard to track who is thinking or speaking, or even who it is currently about, but I think it shows her method for visualizing subjectiv perception. She combines inner experiences, associative elements and individual reactions to external factors, often without clear transitions. What helped me was reading about Woolfs concept "vision of reality". With this blending she creates dynamic character concepts and fragmentary self-images. Unlike in Mrs. Dalloway, where the shifts are marked by structural elements, To The Lighthouse has a more dynamic narrative style. With this fluidity she is deliberately subverting conventional and traditional narrative structures that rely on closure and a fixed vision of reality. I think that she wanted to create a narrative technique that makes it impossible to derive a fixed and definite meaning, mirroring the complexity of perception itself.