What is one of the three main strategies that Woolf used in A Room Own to help reader understand her topic?
One of the three main strategies Virginia Woolf uses in *A Room of One's Own* to help the reader understand her topic (the relationship between women and fiction) is the use of fictional examples and hypothetical scenarios. She constructs imagined biographies of Shakespeare's sister and other women, demonstrating what might have happened to their creative potential given the societal limitations placed upon them. This contrasts with the historical realities she discusses, making the abstract argument more concrete and relatable.