Book Detail

Ethics of Working Class Autobiography: Representation of Family by Four American Authors

ISBN: 9780786425761

Contributors: Bidinger, Elizabeth (Author)

Publisher: McFarland & Company, 2006

Binding: Paperback (Readerbound Available)

Retail: $39.95

Discounted Price
1 copy: $47.94
2+ copies: $47.94

Description

Focusing on the ethics of autobiography, this volume analyzes the works of four writers who spent much of their youth in working-class circumstances yet became highly educated intellectual professionals. It examines the ways in which each author confronts his or her past and how the authors represent their working-class family members. Texts discussed are Growing Up by Russell Baker (1982), Brothers and Keepers by John Edgar Wideman (1984), A Woman in Amber by Agate Nesaule (1995) and Clear Springs by Bobbie Ann Mason (1999). Each work recounts the author's struggle with a particular societal element such as gender, race, class division or region. While Baker's memoir provides an example of positive, balanced characterizations of working-class relatives, the texts by Wideman, Nesaule and Mason illustrate the ethical pitfalls in portraying less powerful family members in one's life story. An overview of trends in working-class autobiography and a brief survey regarding the critical reception of each work are included.

Reviews & Citations

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    Citation: pg. 1

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    Review: Child's Book Association