Autobiographical Writing and British Literature 1783-1834OUP Oxford, 2005 M01 20 - 256 pages The word 'autobiography' is a late eighteenth-century coinage; yet by 1826 it was used as the title for a multi-volume anthology of self-writing, and in 1834 Thomas Carlyle wrote of 'these Autobiographical times of ours'. Over the course of those few decades, readers and writers came to recognize and name a new genre. This book is the first full study of the phenomenon, examining both the conditions and the practice of autobiographical writing in Romantic literature.Historians of autobiography have often pointed to the turn of the nineteenth century as a pivotal moment. In Rousseau and De Quincey's 'Confessions', Wordsworth's 'Prelude', and other canonical documents, it has been argued, self-writing begins to serve the purpose of expressing the individuality, autonomy, and interiority of the self. A more wide-ranging view of the actual state of autobiography at the time exposes this narrative as a misrepresentation. Self-writing does gain a new kind ofprominence around 1800; not, however, because it articulates 'Romantic' ideologies of selfhood, but because it becomes a focus of scrutiny, and of contention. The decades of the Romantic period identified themselves as 'Autobiographical times' -- but did so anxiously. This book asks: what formsdid that recognition and that anxiety take within the literary culture of the period? What did autobiography mean to Romantic readers and writers? How do autobiographical texts of the period reflect, express, and negotiate these conditions?As well as reading a wide variety of those documents, with single chapters devoted to works by Coleridge, Byron, and Lamb, Treadwell examines writing on and around autobiography: essays, reviews, and other forms of commentary. By preserving a continuous relation between the texts and their contexts, this book offers the first proper study of what is actually meant by 'Romantic autobiography'. |
Contents
The rise of autobiography | 3 |
The case of Rousseau | 32 |
Autobiography and the literary public sphere | 59 |
Copyright | |
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Analytical Review appears Authentic autobio autobiographical act autobiographical writing becomes Biographia Literaria book's canto Catherine Jemmat chapter character Charles Lamb Childe Harold circulation Coleridge Coleridge's commentators consciousness contemporary critical D'Israeli D'Israeli's defined described discourse distinctive documents Edinburgh Review egotism Elia Elia's Elian Equiano essays experience fact figure of Byron first-person Foster genre Gooch's Harold III Hazlitt's identity imagined interest inwardness Ireland's judgement kind Lamb Lamb's language letters Liber Amoris life-writing literary public sphere London Lyrical Ballads Magazine Mary Wollstonecraft Memoirs Monthly Review narrative narrator Olaudah Equiano person poem preface Prelude prescriptive present published Quincey Quincey's readers reading recollection reference reflexive relation rhetoric Romantic autobiography Romantic period Romantic-period Romanticism Rousseau Rousseau's Confessions Sartor Sartor Resartus self-consciousness self-writing selfhood sense stance stanza story Teufelsdröckh's textual Thomas De Quincey tion transactions truth University Press vols volume William Henry Ireland Wollstonecraft's Wordsworth