Autobiographical literature especially reveals the processes by
which writers convert their own historical experience into
fictional form and suggests how literary forms function in life.
This volume defines an original theory of autobiographical writing
and provides intriguing analyses of major American works of
literature.
The Art of Life examines the transformation of history into
literature in Walden, "Song of Myself," Henry James's Prefaces, The
Education of Henry Adams, Paterson, and the poetry of Frank O'Hara.
These works are approached as events in themselves and are analyzed
as conversions of form and history, fiction and fact, and even
aesthetics and politics. Thus the work of literature is set in the
total experience of living, and the writer is seen not only as an
artist but also as a person in a historical, political, and
cultural environment. As well as a creator of literature, the
writer is viewed as a social, psychological, and biological
being.
Chapters on the narcissistic economy of Walden, the mythicizing
of history and personality in "Song of Myself," the self-conscious
relation that makes the Prefaces of Henry James the autobiography
of an artist. the comic perspective of The Education of Henry
Adams, and the radical innovation of Paterson and O'Hara's poetry
provide new readings of major American works. Each chapter contains
some distinct critical insight which not only contributes to, but
can be relished apart from, the book's overarching theoretical
argument.
The Art of Life is a sophisticated theoretical discussion of
autobiography with rich psychological, philosophical, and cultural
ramifications.
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