Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes
One of the founding concepts in modern autobiography is the understanding that autobiographical truth is connected to the ideal of sincerity. So much in modern autobiography has its origins in Rousseau’s Confessions, particularly through the idea that autobiographical writing is fundamentally an act...
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University Of Queensland: School of Languages and Cultures
2015
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author | Hayes, P |
author_facet | Hayes, P |
author_sort | Hayes, P |
collection | OXFORD |
description | One of the founding concepts in modern autobiography is the understanding that autobiographical truth is connected to the ideal of sincerity. So much in modern autobiography has its origins in Rousseau’s Confessions, particularly through the idea that autobiographical writing is fundamentally an act of persuasion, one that persuades an audience that it embodies a sincere realisation of the self. “Rousseau’s interest,” Jean Starobinski has argued, “begins with the question: Why does this inner feeling…not find its echo in the according of immediate recognition?” And Rousseau’s text, Starobinsky continues, therefore must convey a voice “supple enough and varied enough to tell the diversity, the contradictions, the slight details, the miniscule nuances, the interlocking of tiny perceptions whose tissue constitutes the unique existence of Jean-Jacques.” There is much that distances Rousseau from contemporary autobiographical writing, and there are of course very different ways of interpreting Rousseau’s significance as a confessional writer. But the notion that the task of autobiography is to establish a written presence capable of winning recognition as uniquely his or her own, finds its equivalent in the injunction repeatedly made by life-writing instructors on MFAs to “find your voice”, to create the persona that is you. As Vivian Gornick explains in The Situation and the Story, a how-to guide that accompanies her MFA course, successful autobiographies derive from “an insight that organised the writing, and in each case a persona had been created to serve the insight”. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T23:32:36Z |
format | Conference item |
id | oxford-uuid:6c93c360-6901-47b7-b2d2-ae54c79e4a7b |
institution | University of Oxford |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T23:32:36Z |
publishDate | 2015 |
publisher | University Of Queensland: School of Languages and Cultures |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:6c93c360-6901-47b7-b2d2-ae54c79e4a7b2022-03-26T19:11:44ZAutobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland BarthesConference itemhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794uuid:6c93c360-6901-47b7-b2d2-ae54c79e4a7bSymplectic Elements at OxfordUniversity Of Queensland: School of Languages and Cultures2015Hayes, POne of the founding concepts in modern autobiography is the understanding that autobiographical truth is connected to the ideal of sincerity. So much in modern autobiography has its origins in Rousseau’s Confessions, particularly through the idea that autobiographical writing is fundamentally an act of persuasion, one that persuades an audience that it embodies a sincere realisation of the self. “Rousseau’s interest,” Jean Starobinski has argued, “begins with the question: Why does this inner feeling…not find its echo in the according of immediate recognition?” And Rousseau’s text, Starobinsky continues, therefore must convey a voice “supple enough and varied enough to tell the diversity, the contradictions, the slight details, the miniscule nuances, the interlocking of tiny perceptions whose tissue constitutes the unique existence of Jean-Jacques.” There is much that distances Rousseau from contemporary autobiographical writing, and there are of course very different ways of interpreting Rousseau’s significance as a confessional writer. But the notion that the task of autobiography is to establish a written presence capable of winning recognition as uniquely his or her own, finds its equivalent in the injunction repeatedly made by life-writing instructors on MFAs to “find your voice”, to create the persona that is you. As Vivian Gornick explains in The Situation and the Story, a how-to guide that accompanies her MFA course, successful autobiographies derive from “an insight that organised the writing, and in each case a persona had been created to serve the insight”. |
spellingShingle | Hayes, P Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes |
title | Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes |
title_full | Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes |
title_fullStr | Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes |
title_full_unstemmed | Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes |
title_short | Autobiography and Romantic Irony: J.M. Coetzee and Roland Barthes |
title_sort | autobiography and romantic irony j m coetzee and roland barthes |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hayesp autobiographyandromanticironyjmcoetzeeandrolandbarthes |