Biofiction: An Introduction

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Biofiction: An Introduction provides readers with the history, origins, evolution, and legitimization of biofiction, suggesting potential lines of inquiry, exploring criticisms of the literary form, and modeling the process of analyzing and interpreting individual texts. Written for undergraduate and graduate students, this volume combines comprehensive coverage of the core foundations of biofiction with contemporary and lively debates within the subject. The volume aims to confront and illuminate the following questions:

• When did biofiction come into being?

• What forces gave birth to it?

• How does it uniquely function and signify?

• Why has it become such a dominant aesthetic form in recent years?

This introduction will give readers a framework for evaluating specific biofictions from writers as varied as Friedrich Nietzsche, George Moore, Zora Neale Hurston, William Styron, Angela Carter, Joyce Carol Oates, and Colm Tóibín, thus enabling readers to assess the value and impact of individual works on the culture at large. Spanning nineteenth-century origins to contemporary debates and adaptations, this book not only equips the reader with a firm grounding in the fundamentals of biofiction but also provides a valuable guide to the uncanny power of the biographical novel to transform cultural attitudes, perspectives, and beliefs.

Author(s): Michael Lackey
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 198

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of figures
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
PART I: The Nineteenth-Century Origins
1. The Art of Agential Living
2. Portraits of Whom?
PART II: Literature, Cultural Critique, and Political Liberation
3. Biofiction as Social Critique
4. The Irish, the Unslave Trade, and the Decolonization of the Mind
5. The 1930s and the First Surge in Biofiction
PART III: Literary Debates
6. The Assault on Biofiction
7. The William Styron Controversy
8. Postmodernism’s Historiographic Metafiction or Biofiction’s “Truth” Proposals
9. John Edgar Wideman on the Ethics of Fictionalizing a Life in Biofiction
PART IV: The Uncanny Power of Biofiction
10. Biofiction as Cultural Intervention: The Case of Sally Hemings
11. The 1990s: The Decade of Biofiction’s Official Legitimization and Dominance
12. The Transformative Power of Biofiction for Students: A Case Study of David Ebershoff’s The Danish Girl
Bibliography
Index