Biography appears to thrive as never before; and there clearly remains
a broad readership for literary biography. But the methods and
approaches of recent criticism which have contributed rich insights
and asked new questions about the ways in which we interrogate and
appreciate literature have scarcely influenced biography. Biography as
a form has been largely unaffected by either new critical or
historical perspectives. For early-modern scholars the biographical
model, fashioned as a stable form in the eighteenth century, has been,
in some respects, a distorting lens onto early-modern lives. In the
Renaissance and early-modern period rather the biography's organic and
developmental narratives of a coherent subject, lives were written and
represented in a bewildering array of textual sites and generic forms.
And such lives were clearly imagined and written not to entertain or
even simply to inform, but to edify and instruct, to counsel and
polemicize. It is only when we understand how early moderns imagined
and narrated lives, only that is through a full return to history and
an exact historicizing, that we can newly conceive the meaning of
those lives and begin to rewrite their histories free of the
imperatives and teleologies of Enlightenment. In Writing Lives
literary scholars, cultural critics, and historians of ideas and
visual media, currently engaged both with early modern conceptions of
the life and our own conceptualizing of the biographical project,
reflect on the problems of writing lives from the various perspectives
of their own research and in the form of case studies informed by new
questions.
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Biography and Textuality, Identity and Representation in Early Modern England
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191550898
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter