ISBN-13: 9783631543856 / Angielski / Miękka / 2006 / 338 str.
Both the postmodern debate about the -death of the author- and cultural debates about constructing identities (national, socio-political, cultural, ethnic, sexual, etc.) have led to multiple attempts at redefining autobiography, traditionally predicated on concepts of identity and truth. By bringing together twenty-seven case studies of autobiographical texts from over four centuries and from a variety of cultural (mainly Anglophone) backgrounds, this book demonstrates how fruitful a critical focus on the interaction between autobiography and fiction proves for understanding the complex strategies by which subject positions are established and communicated. The texts examined include: De Quincey s Confessions of an English Opium Eater, Thomas Hardy s A Pair of Blue Eyes, Anais Nin s diaries, General Sherman s Memoirs, Abdelkebir Khatibi s L Amour bilingue, Nirad Chaudhuri s Autobiography of an Unknown Indian, Helene Deutsch s Confrontations with Myself, Sky Lee s Disappearing Moon Cafe, Mary McCarthy s Memories of a Catholic Girlhood, Graham Swift s The Light of Day, Ian McEwan s Atonement, A.S. Byatt s The Biographer s Tale, Richard Wright s Black Boy, and Zora Neale Hurston s Dust Tracks on a Road."