Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Defining the Autobiography :: Expository Definition Essays
Defining the Autobiography     à     à   In a lecture on  autobiography, Diane Howard states, "The focus of autobiographical writing and  performing is on subjective questions, struggles, and representations" (Howard  1).â⬠ ââ¬Å"Autobiography is a broad term that lends itself to a variety of meanings  and intentions.â⬠ There are many differences between autobiographies, especially  along gender lines.â⬠ Women tend to write about different subjects than men do.  Despite subjectivity and differences, there are similarities that make  autobiography an autobiography.â⬠ The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines  autobiography as "the biography of a person narrated by himself".â⬠ This is a  vague definition that does not delve into the common similarities found among  many autobiographies that separates them from other forms of writing.     à       Author of The Forms of Autobiography, William C.  Spengemann writes "an autobiography had to offer an at least ostensibly factual  account of the writerà s own life" (Spengemann 1).â⬠ The inclusion of fact in  autobiography is what makes the writing valid.â⬠ In her introduction to Anne  Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, Eleanor Roosevelt writes, "the young are not  afraid of telling the truth;" the entire diary offers an honest account of her  persona, family life as well as details of WWII. (Frank xiii).â⬠ Autobiography  needs to be truthful in its intention, and therefore a diary can be a good  source of truth.â⬠ Facts are a fairly important aspect of the success of  autobiography.     à       Despite the importance of factual truth, emotional truth  also makes autobiographical writing credible.â⬠ The very last line of Anne  Frankà s Diary says "Will the reader take into consideration that when this story  was written the writer had not cooled down from her fury!" (Frank 94).â⬠ This  statement suggests that the events she just narrated are not factually correct,  however, they are emotionally honest.â⬠ In her autobiographical essay, "How It  Feels To Be Colored Me", Zora Neale Hurston speaks of Jazz in emotional terms as  "Music. The great blobs of purple and red emotion" (Hurston 387).â⬠ In the midst  of her Jazz frenzy, Hurston is "in the jungle and living in the jungle way.â⬠ My  face is painted red and yellow and my body is painted blue.â⬠ My pules is  throbbing like a war drum" (Hurston 387).â⬠ Hurstonà s blobs of color are not  necessarily factual, but they are an attempt to convey honest emotion.  					  Defining the Autobiography  ::  Expository Definition Essays  Defining the Autobiography     à     à   In a lecture on  autobiography, Diane Howard states, "The focus of autobiographical writing and  performing is on subjective questions, struggles, and representations" (Howard  1).â⬠ ââ¬Å"Autobiography is a broad term that lends itself to a variety of meanings  and intentions.â⬠ There are many differences between autobiographies, especially  along gender lines.â⬠ Women tend to write about different subjects than men do.  Despite subjectivity and differences, there are similarities that make  autobiography an autobiography.â⬠ The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines  autobiography as "the biography of a person narrated by himself".â⬠ This is a  vague definition that does not delve into the common similarities found among  many autobiographies that separates them from other forms of writing.     à       Author of The Forms of Autobiography, William C.  Spengemann writes "an autobiography had to offer an at least ostensibly factual  account of the writerà s own life" (Spengemann 1).â⬠ The inclusion of fact in  autobiography is what makes the writing valid.â⬠ In her introduction to Anne  Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, Eleanor Roosevelt writes, "the young are not  afraid of telling the truth;" the entire diary offers an honest account of her  persona, family life as well as details of WWII. (Frank xiii).â⬠ Autobiography  needs to be truthful in its intention, and therefore a diary can be a good  source of truth.â⬠ Facts are a fairly important aspect of the success of  autobiography.     à       Despite the importance of factual truth, emotional truth  also makes autobiographical writing credible.â⬠ The very last line of Anne  Frankà s Diary says "Will the reader take into consideration that when this story  was written the writer had not cooled down from her fury!" (Frank 94).â⬠ This  statement suggests that the events she just narrated are not factually correct,  however, they are emotionally honest.â⬠ In her autobiographical essay, "How It  Feels To Be Colored Me", Zora Neale Hurston speaks of Jazz in emotional terms as  "Music. The great blobs of purple and red emotion" (Hurston 387).â⬠ In the midst  of her Jazz frenzy, Hurston is "in the jungle and living in the jungle way.â⬠ My  face is painted red and yellow and my body is painted blue.â⬠ My pules is  throbbing like a war drum" (Hurston 387).â⬠ Hurstonà s blobs of color are not  necessarily factual, but they are an attempt to convey honest emotion.  					    
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