The intimate empire : reading women's autobiography

Author(s)

    • Whitlock, Gillian

Bibliographic Information

The intimate empire : reading women's autobiography

Gillian Whitlock

(Literature, culture, and identity)

Cassell, 2000

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

By means of contextualized readings, this work argues that autobiographic writing allows an intimate access to processes of colonization and decolonization, incorporation and resistance, and the formation and reformation of identities which occurs in postcolonial space. The book explores the interconnections between race, gender, autobiography and colonialism and uses a method of reading which looks for connections between very different autobiographical writings to pursue constructions of blackness and whiteness, femininity and masculinity, and nationality. Unlike previous studies of autobiography which focus on a limited Euro American canon, the book brings together contemporary and 19th-century women's autobiographies and travel writing from Canada, the Caribbean, Kenya, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. With emphasis on the reader of autobiography as much as the subject, it argues that colonization and resistance are deeply embedded in thinking about the self.

Table of Contents

  • Autobiography and slavery - believing in the "History" of Mary Prince
  • settler subjects
  • travelling in memory of slavery
  • Kenya - the land that never was
  • autobiography and resistance
  • in memory of the colonial child.

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