Cover image for Altered Egos : Authority in American Autobiography.
Altered Egos : Authority in American Autobiography.
Title:
Altered Egos : Authority in American Autobiography.
Author:
Couser, G. Thomas.
ISBN:
9780195345230
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (298 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- 1 Prologue: The Case of the Counterfeit Autobiography -- 2 Introduction: Authority, Autobiography, America -- 3 The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin: Self-Constitutional Conventions -- 4 Prose and Cons: The Autobiographies of P. T. Barnum -- 5 False "I's": Mark Twain's Pseudonymous Autobiography -- 6 (En)Slave(d) Narrative: Early Afro-American Autobiography -- 7 Mary Boykin Chesnut: Secession, Confederacy, Reconstruction -- 8 Black Elk Speaks With Forked Tongue -- 9 Biculturalism in Contemporary Autobiography: Richard Rodriguez and Maxine Hong Kingston -- 10 Conclusion -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.
Abstract:
This work explores the "authority" of autobiography in several related senses: first, the idea that autobiography is authoritative writing because it is presumably verifiable; second, the idea that one's life is one's exclusive textual domain; third, the idea that, because of the apparent congruence between the implicit ideology of the genre and that of the nation, autobiography has a special prestige in America. Aware of the recent critiques of the notion of autobiography as issuing from, determined by, or referring to a pre-existing self, Couser examines the ways in which the authority of particular texts is called into question--for example, because they involve pseudonymity (Mark Twain), the revision of a presumably spontaneous form (Mary Chesnut's Civil War "diaries"), bilingual authorship (Richard Rodriguez and Maxine Hong Kingston), collaborative production (Black Elk), or outright fraud (Clifford Irving's "autobiography" of Howard Hughes). Couser examines both the way in which canonical autobiographers may playfully and purposely undermine their own narrative authority and the way in which minority writers' control of their lives may be compromised. Autobiography, then, is portrayed here as an arena in which individuals struggle for self-possession and self-expression against the constraints of language, genre, and society.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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