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Masks and Icons

Subjectivity in Post-Nietzschean Autobiography

by Leszek Drong (Author)
©2001 Monographs VIII, 140 Pages
Series: Literary and Cultural Theory, Volume 10

Summary

With its large variety of forms and manifestations, autobiography is every theoretician’s nightmare. Although ubiquitous – few literary creations are truly anonymous – it is also commonly believed to be disappearing into thin air. Leszek Drong argues for the reification of the concept of autobiography, but his argument does not play into the hands of those who favour neat generic classifications. Instead, in Masks and Icons, the autobiographical is construed as a figure of reading, an interpretive strategy which implicates the reader in a confrontation with her/his own subjectivity. Taking heed of Friedrich Nietzsche’s project, which consisted in ‘giving style to oneself’, Drong explores the modes of self-fashioning in modern autobiographical writings and demonstrates how discursive images of a writer’s ‘I’ affect our self-perception.

Details

Pages
VIII, 140
Year
2001
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631376737
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2001. VIII, 140 pp., 4 fig.

Biographical notes

Leszek Drong (Author)

The Author: Leszek Drong is Lecturer in Literary Studies at the University of Silesia. He has published extensively on autobiography and subjectivity. His research interests also include the political and cultural consequences of European integration.

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Title: Masks and Icons