Tudor Autobiography: Listening for Inwardness
by Meredith Anne SkuraView All Available Formats & Editions
Histories of autobiography in England often assume the genre hardly existed before 1600. But Tudor Autobiography investigates eleven sixteenth-century English writers who used sermons, a saint’s biography, courtly and popular verse, a traveler’s report, a history book, a husbandry book, and a supposedly fictional adventure novel to share the/i>
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Overview
Histories of autobiography in England often assume the genre hardly existed before 1600. But Tudor Autobiography investigates eleven sixteenth-century English writers who used sermons, a saint’s biography, courtly and popular verse, a traveler’s report, a history book, a husbandry book, and a supposedly fictional adventure novel to share the secrets of the heart and tell their life stories. In the past such texts have not been called autobiographies because they do not reveal much of the inwardness of their subject, a requisite of most modern autobiographies. But, according to Meredith Anne Skura, writers reveal themselves not only by what they say but by how they say it. Borrowing methods from affective linguistics, narratology, and psychoanalysis, Skura shows that a writer’s thoughts and feelings can be traced in his or her language. Rejecting the search for “the early modern self” in life writing, Tudor Autobiography instead asks what authors said about themselves, who wrote about themselves, how, and why. The result is a fascinating glimpse into a range of lived and imagined experience that challenges assumptions about life and autobiography in the early modern period.
Editorial Reviews
Peter Smith
"Skura's engaging study should be lauded not only for illuminating a series of autobiographical acts that predate the supposed invention of modern subjectivity in late sixteenth-century England, but also for demonstrating the literary value of a group of texts more often consulted for their cultural implications than for their individual merits."
Mary Ellen Lamb
"Skura aims to demonstrate not only the existence of autonomous and integral selves but their capacity, their enthusiasm even, to speak about and with themselves....What is both original and courageous about Tudor Autobiography, though, is its insistence that not only did such a self exist, but that it was determined to announce its own existence and even debate the difficulties of making such an announcement."
"What Skura has accomplished is significant and notable. In the process of expanding the definition of what might be considered autobiography, she has explored nine unique autobiographical selves in ways that open out their texts. . . . This book is important not only for those working in autobiography but for those interested in early modern culture generally."
Product Details
- ISBN-13:
- 9780226761886
- Publisher:
- University of Chicago Press
- Publication date:
- 02/15/2010
- Sold by:
- Barnes & Noble
- Format:
- NOOK Book
- Pages:
- 272
- File size:
- 2 MB
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