Recognizing BiographyUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 1987 - 231 頁 Epstein's narrative interweaves interpretive and theoretical chapters as it emplots the discourse of English biography from Walton to Strachey. In this way familiar generic relationships between biographer, subject, life, text, falsehood, and readership are analyzed in specific (if constantly shifting) historical, literary, cultural, and economic texts. |
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altar Arnaldo Momigliano authority becomes biographer and biographical biographical narrative biographical recognition biographical subject body Boswell's Boswellian biographer Cambridge career century chapter characterizes cited claim cognitive context conversion correction course criticism crucial cultural discourse Derrida describe discursive traces doctrine of pursuits Donne Donne's economy edition eighteenth-century emerges Eminent Victorians employed employment English biography essay event fact facthood Foucault frame recognizing genre Holroyd homosexuality ical individual human iron chieftain J. H. Plumb Jacques Derrida James Boswell John Johnson Johnson's Savage labour language Leon Edel letter life-course life-text lifewriting literary property Lives London Lytton Strachey metaphor Michael Holroyd Michel Foucault mis)recognized monument natural notion Novarr Oscar Wilde Oxford pastoral power patron patronage pattern Paul Murray Kendall poem pose privileged readers recognizing the biographical relationship Savage's secular sense sermon Strachey's strange structure suggests term theory tion Toronto traditional trans vols Walton's narrative writing York