
What Happens When Novelists Write About Their Own Lives Directly, In Memoirs And Autobiographies, Rather Than In Novels? How Do They Present Themselves, And What Do Their Self-portraits Reveal? In A Series Of Biographical Case Studies, Portraits From Life Examines How Seven Canonical Modernist Writers - Joseph Conrad, Ford Madox Ford, Henry James, Wyndham Lewis, Gertrude Stein, H.g. Wells, And Edith Wharton - Depicted Themselves In Their Memoirs And Autobiographies During The First Half Of The Twentieth Century. Drawing On A Range Of Life-writing Sources In This Innovative Group Portrait, Jerome Boyd Maunsell Reconstructs The Periods During Which These Authors Worked On Their Memoirs, Often Towards The End Of Their Lives, And Shows How Memoirs And Autobiographies Are Just As Artful As Novels. The Seven Portraits In The Book Also Create A Rich Network Of Encounters, As Many Of These Writers Knew Each Other, And Wrote About Each Other In Their Reminiscences. Portraits From Life Investigates The Difficulties And Possibilities Of Autobiography - The Relation Of Fact And Fiction, Biography And Autobiography; The Ethical Issues Of Dealing With Real People; The Thin Generic Lines Between Novels And Autobiographies; And The Deceptive Workings Of Memory - And How All These Writers Dealt With These Concerns As They Looked Back On Their Lives. An Act Of Portraiture And Biography As Well As An Act Of Criticism, Moving From London To Paris And Through Two World Wars, It Also Pieces Together A Fresh And Constantly Inter-connecting Narrative Of The Modernist Era In England And France.
This book investigates how seven canonical modernist writers utilized memoirs and autobiographies to construct their public personas and navigate the blurred boundaries between factual record and creative narrative. Jerome Boyd Maunsell, a scholar of modernist literature, examines the life-writing of authors such as Joseph Conrad, Henry James, and Edith Wharton. By analyzing these texts as deliberate artistic constructions rather than mere historical records, the author argues that autobiographies are as carefully crafted as the novels these writers are better known for.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and critics recognize this work as a nuanced contribution to the study of modernist life-writing and the mechanics of self-representation. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the prose, which balances biographical detail with critical analysis of the autobiographical genre.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192506412
ISBN-13:
9780192506412
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