The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.

The study takes the measure to which "self" and "self-representation" do not coincide in autobiography. Each of the writers in this study--Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Adams, and Henry James--writes an autobiography that consciously divides the writing-self from the written-self. E...

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Main Author: Parkhurst, Joseph Lanius.
Other Authors: Dryden, Edgar
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185137
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1851372015-10-23T04:30:49Z The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James. Parkhurst, Joseph Lanius. Dryden, Edgar Rosenblatt, Paul McElroy, John Literature. The study takes the measure to which "self" and "self-representation" do not coincide in autobiography. Each of the writers in this study--Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Adams, and Henry James--writes an autobiography that consciously divides the writing-self from the written-self. Each does this at least in part as a result of his discomfort with the patriarchal culture of nineteenth-century America. Never fitting the normative models of male action in the areas of commerce and politics, each uses his autobiographical writing to construct himself along the model of the "other." This gesture requires presenting the self as a cultural construct, fabricated in a language that is always already alienated from the writing subject. As such, the signifiers of personal and social identity are manipulable in a pervasive rhetoric of subjectivity, a rhetoric supremely adapted to the literary enterprise of autobiography. In "The Custom-House," Hawthorne insists on the separateness of the sign of the self from the signified. This separateness permits the author a dilatory space which keeps him unreadable even while being read, a gesture he reproduces in The Scarlet Letter, which is read as a fictional extention of the same rhetoric of illegibility that he presents in the autobiographical preface. In The Education of Henry Adams, Adams presents a self which figuratively corresponds to a text. The "self" is a palimpsest of all the influences that have been inscribed on it, and the job of the autobiographer is to edit that palimpsest into a self/story. Fashioning a self, therefore, is consubstantial with fashioning a book, and the two activities coincide in the autobiography. Notes of a Son and Brother shows James purporting a complementary relationship between reader and writer, whereby a reader lives in and completes the life of a writer. In the memoir, James's commemorative task as reader of the family's letters allows him to appropriate the historical personages through the acquisition of their writing. In this way, autobiography (both the activity and the product) and the self are no longer supplemental to others but originary and self-realizing. 1990 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185137 708645833 9100555 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Literature.
spellingShingle Literature.
Parkhurst, Joseph Lanius.
The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.
description The study takes the measure to which "self" and "self-representation" do not coincide in autobiography. Each of the writers in this study--Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Adams, and Henry James--writes an autobiography that consciously divides the writing-self from the written-self. Each does this at least in part as a result of his discomfort with the patriarchal culture of nineteenth-century America. Never fitting the normative models of male action in the areas of commerce and politics, each uses his autobiographical writing to construct himself along the model of the "other." This gesture requires presenting the self as a cultural construct, fabricated in a language that is always already alienated from the writing subject. As such, the signifiers of personal and social identity are manipulable in a pervasive rhetoric of subjectivity, a rhetoric supremely adapted to the literary enterprise of autobiography. In "The Custom-House," Hawthorne insists on the separateness of the sign of the self from the signified. This separateness permits the author a dilatory space which keeps him unreadable even while being read, a gesture he reproduces in The Scarlet Letter, which is read as a fictional extention of the same rhetoric of illegibility that he presents in the autobiographical preface. In The Education of Henry Adams, Adams presents a self which figuratively corresponds to a text. The "self" is a palimpsest of all the influences that have been inscribed on it, and the job of the autobiographer is to edit that palimpsest into a self/story. Fashioning a self, therefore, is consubstantial with fashioning a book, and the two activities coincide in the autobiography. Notes of a Son and Brother shows James purporting a complementary relationship between reader and writer, whereby a reader lives in and completes the life of a writer. In the memoir, James's commemorative task as reader of the family's letters allows him to appropriate the historical personages through the acquisition of their writing. In this way, autobiography (both the activity and the product) and the self are no longer supplemental to others but originary and self-realizing.
author2 Dryden, Edgar
author_facet Dryden, Edgar
Parkhurst, Joseph Lanius.
author Parkhurst, Joseph Lanius.
author_sort Parkhurst, Joseph Lanius.
title The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.
title_short The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.
title_full The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.
title_fullStr The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.
title_full_unstemmed The rhetoric of subjectivity: The written self in the autobiographical writings of Hawthorne, Adams and James.
title_sort rhetoric of subjectivity: the written self in the autobiographical writings of hawthorne, adams and james.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185137
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