Fr. 66.00

Work of Life Writing - Essays and Lectures

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Life writing, in its various forms, does work that other forms of expression do not; it bears on the world in a way distinct from imaginative genres like fiction, drama, and poetry; it acts in and on history in significant ways. Memoirs of illness and disability often seek to depathologize the conditions that they recount. Memoirs of parents by their children extend or alter relations forged initially face to face in the home. At a time when memoir and other forms of life writing are being produced and consumed in unprecedented numbers, this book reminds readers that memoir is not mainly a "literary" genre or mere entertainment. Similarly, letters are not merely epiphenomena of our "real lives." Correspondence does not just serve to communicate; it enacts and sustains human relationships. Memoir matters, and there's life in letters. All life writing arises of our daily lives and has distinctive impacts on them and the culture in which we live.

List of contents

Chapter 1. Prologue: Death and Life Writing: Reflections on My Morbid Career
Chapter 2. Introduction: The Work of Memoir
Chapter 3. Quality-of-life Writing: Illness, Disability, and Contemporary American Memoir
Chapter 4. Is There a Body in this Text? Embodiment in Graphic Somatography
Chapter 5. Genre Matters: Form, Force, and Filiation
Chapter 6. Memoir and (Lack of) Memory: Filial Narratives of Paternal Dementia
Chapter 7. Paper Orphans: Writers’ Children Write Their Lives
Chapter 8. Filiation in Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father."
Chapter 9. Disability, Depression, Diagnosis, and Harm: Reflections on Two Personal Scenarios
Chapter 10. Vulnerable Subjects: Caveat Scriptor
Chapter 11. The Shape of Death in American Autobiography
Chapter 12. On "Freedom Writing": Expression and Repression
Chapter 13. Life in Letters: Letters as Life

About the author

G. Thomas Couser received his doctorate in American Civilization at Brown University in 1977. After teaching English at Connecticut College, he moved on to Hofstra University, where he founded and directed a Disability Studies Program. From his dissertation on, his scholarship has been concerned with autobiography and memoir, especially with life writing stimulated by disability and illness and the ethics of life writing.
His academic books include Recovering Bodies: Illness, Disability, and Life Writing (1997), Vulnerable Subjects: Ethics and Life Writing (2004), Signifying Bodies: Disability in Contemporary Life Writing (2009), and Memoir: An Introduction (2012). He has also published dozens of articles and book chapters.
In addition to scholarship, he has published personal essays in the Southwest Review, New Haven Review, and Hudson Review and Letter to My Father: A Memoir (2017).

Summary

Life writing, in its various forms, does work that other forms of expression do not. Memoir matters, and there’s life in letters. All life writing arises of our daily lives and has distinctive impacts on them and the culture in which we live.

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