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Telling Women's Lives: The New Biography
Rutgers University Press, 1996 eISBN: 978-0-8135-5897-4 | Cloth: 978-0-8135-2092-6 | Paper: 978-0-8135-2375-0 Library of Congress Classification CT22.W34 1994 Dewey Decimal Classification 808.06692
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Placing herself in the avid reader’s chair, Linda Wagner-Martin writes about women’s biography from George Eliot and Virginia Woolf to Eleanor Roosevelt and Margaret Mead, and even to Cher and Elizabeth Taylor. Along the way, she looks at dozens of other life stories, probing at the differences between biographies of men and women, prevailing stereotypes about women’s lives and roles, questions about what is public and private, and the hazy margins between autobiography, biography, and other genres. In quick paced and wide-ranging discussions, she looks at issues of authorial stance (who controls the narrative? who chooses which story to tell?), voice (is this story told in the traditional objective tone? and if it is, what effect does that telling have on our reading?), and the politics of publishing (why aren’t more books about women’s lives published? and when they are, what happens to their advertising budgets?). She discusses the problems of writing biography of achieving women who were also wives (how does the biographer balance the two?), of daughters who attempt to write about their mothers, and of husbands trying to portray their wives. See other books on: Biography as a literary form | Methodology | New Biography | Wagner-Martin, Linda | Women's Studies See other titles from Rutgers University Press |
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