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The (Hi)story of their Lives: Mythic Autobiography and “The Lost Generation”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

Marc Dolan
Affiliation:
Literature in American History and Literature, Harvard University.

Extract

Of what use is autobiography to history? At first glance, autobiographies would seem invaluable to historians. After all, no attempt to reconstruct or understand the past would seem complete without a sprinkling of quotations from some form of “eyewitness account.” Among the various forms of such accounts available to historians, the formal autobiography often provides the most comprehensive and comprehensible account extant of the personal experience of historical events. Yet even so strong an admirer of the genre as Allan Nevins was forced to admit that very few autobiographies were ideally suited to the traditional historian's purpose. Most, he conceded, were “imperfect” historical documents at best and could prove “far more deeply misleading” than many other historical sources.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

1 In speaking of “the formal autobiography,” I seek to distinguish, à la Marc Bloch, between those autobiographical texts clearly intended for a public and frequently posterior audience, hereafter “formal autobiographies”; and those eventually published texts that were originally intended for more private purposes. (Postmodernist critics should note that my use of the word “formal” is not to be considered identical to current usage of the word “performative.” For what it's worth, I consider all texts performative.)

2 Nevins, Allan, “The Autobiography,” collected in Allan Nevins on History, compiled and introduced by Billington, Ray Allen (New York: Scribners, 1975), 237–38Google Scholar. For a good example of Nevins' earlier praise of the genre, see Nevins, , The Gateway to History (1938; rept. New York: D. Appleton & Century, 1938), 323.Google Scholar

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25 Greenblatt, Stephen, “Towards a Poetics of Culture” and Louis A. Montrose, “Professing the Renaissance: The Poetics and Politics of Culture,” both in Veeser, H. Aram, ed., The New Historicism (New York: Routledge, 1989), 136Google Scholar; Williams, , Novel, 192.Google Scholar