Details

Metabiography


Metabiography

Reflecting on Biography
Palgrave Studies in Life Writing

von: Caitríona Ní Dhúill

90,94 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 09.03.2020
ISBN/EAN: 9783030346638
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p>This book explores the contradictions of biography.&nbsp;It charts shifting approaches to the writing and reading of biographies, from post-hagiographical attitudes of the Enlightenment,&nbsp;heroic biographies of Romanticism and irreverent modernist portraits through to contemporary experiments in politically committed and hybrid forms of life writing. The book shows how biographical texts in fact destabilise the models of historical visibility, cultural prominence and narrative coherence that the genre itself seems to uphold. Addressing the fraught relationships between genre and gender, private and public, image and text, life and narrative that play out in the modern biographical tradition,&nbsp;<i>Metabiography&nbsp;</i>suggests new possibilities for reading, writing and thinking about this enduringly popular genre.&nbsp;</p>
<div>1: The Language of Biography.-&nbsp;2: Visual Metaphors in Verbal Lives.-&nbsp;3: Materiality, Metabiography, and Life’s Resistance to Narrative.-&nbsp;4: A Metabiographical Motif.-&nbsp;5: Gender Politics of the Biographical Quest.-&nbsp;6: Biography, Intersubjectivity, and the Not-Self.-&nbsp;7: Interventions in Metabiography.- Bibliography.</div><div><br></div>
<p>Caitríona Ní Dhúill is professor in German at University College Cork and the author of <i>Sex in Imagined Spaces: Gender and Utopia from More to Bloch</i> (2010). She has worked at the universities of St Andrews, Vienna, and Durham, and at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for the History and Theory of Biography, Vienna.</p>
<p>“<i>Metabiography</i> is an intelligent, carefully argued, and substantial contribution to biographical criticism and theory. The comparative range, the easy yet thorough familiarity with existing scholarship, and the remarkable degree to which Caitríona Ní Dhúill anticipates and answers objections or responses to her argument, combine to produce an exciting, thoughtful, suggestive, and valuable intervention into the production and study of biography. The best book about biography I have read in many years.”</p>

<p>- Craig Howes, Director, Center for Biographical Research, Univerity of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, USA</p><p><br></p><p>This book explores the contradictions of biography.&nbsp;It charts shifting approaches to the writing and reading of biographies, from post-hagiographical attitudes of the Enlightenment,&nbsp;heroic biographies of Romanticism and irreverent modernist portraits through to contemporary experiments in politically committed and hybrid forms of life writing. The book shows how biographical texts in fact destabilise the models of historical visibility, cultural prominence and narrative coherence that the genre itself seems to uphold. Addressing the fraught relationships between genre and gender, private and public, image and text, life and narrative that play out in the modern biographical tradition,&nbsp;<i>Metabiography&nbsp;</i>suggests new possibilities for reading, writing and thinking about this enduringly popular genre.&nbsp;<br></p>
Argues for a new approach to biography: not primarily as a source of knowledge about past lives, but as a resource for thinking through and beyond the very idea of life’s narratability Covers a variety of texts from the eighteenth century to the present day Uncovers the prehistory of the burgeoning field of enquiry now known as metabiography
-&nbsp;Argues for a new approach to biography: not primarily as a source of knowledge about past lives, but as a resource for thinking through and beyond the very idea of life’s narratability&nbsp;<div>- Covers a variety of texts from the eighteenth century to the present day</div><div>- Uncovers the prehistory of the burgeoning field of enquiry now known as metabiography &nbsp;</div>
“Metabiography: Reflecting on Biography is an intelligent, carefully argued, and substantial contribution to biographical criticism and theory. The comparative range, the easy yet thorough familiarity with existing scholarship, and the remarkable degree to which Caitríona Ní Dhúill anticipates and answers objections or responses to her argument, combine to produce an exciting, thoughtful, suggestive, and valuable intervention into the production and study of biography.” (Craig Howes, Director, Center for Biographical Research, Univerity of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, USA)