Autobiography : its genesis and phases
dc.contributor.author
Clark, Arthur Melville
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-14T10:11:41Z
dc.date.available
2018-05-14T10:11:41Z
dc.date.issued
1947
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
So numerous are autobiographies to -day that
one may forget how rare they were in the past.
Though the self is the one subject of which
everybody is supposed to have the details, and
so the most natural subject in the world, and
though talk about themselves supplies most people
with their chief topic, the writing down and
publishing, not only episodes, but the whole of
one's history was almost unknown till within the
last 200 years. The very word " autobiography "
was coined only in 18o9,* though the thing was
by then extant. Even to -day the urge to self - publication is still exceptional and it is generally
recognised by autobiographers themselves to
require some excuse, explicit or implicit, though
not necessarily the true one.
en
dc.description.abstract
We are all reluctant to give ourselves away,
to reduce our armaments in the face of a world
we vaguely fear. This distrust may be a bequest
from primitive man who bristled with suspicions
and who, concealing even his true name, the key
as it were to his personality, lived under a
lifelong alias. The need for perpetual vigilance
became gradually less acute and the barriers of
reserve were lowered. But men, outside autobiographies, " still keep something to themselves
they scarce would tell to any ". The expansive
man remains as close as a clam on what really
matters and expands only on the unimportant,
the creditable, and the misleading. All fear the
direction of public attention, and possibly ridicule
or censure, on their private lives. Since they
have never lived them before, they prefer, like
learners on the fiddle, not to be overlooked in
the process. Moreover, they all live a kind of
double life. Be they in the world's eye as chaste
as ice, as pure as snow, and as transparent as the
day, they are not quite what they seem ; they are
pettier in their motives, less disinterested in their
generosity, and less nice in their scruples. " That
I, or any man ", says Trollope, " should tell
anything of himself, I hold to be impossible. Who
could endure to own the doing of a mean thing ?
Who is there that has done none ? " So most
men keep the shabby arrangements and the
threadbare pretences of the house of life dark
behind the shutters. It may even be a haunted
house into many of whose rooms the tenants
rarely peep, preferring to live in the outhouses
and the verandah.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/29679
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 18
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
en
dc.title
Autobiography : its genesis and phases
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
DLitt Doctor of Literature
en
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