Life Writing After Empire

Research output: Book/ReportAnthologyResearchpeer-review

Standard

Life Writing After Empire. / Rasch, Astrid (Editor).

Routledge, 2016. 156 p.

Research output: Book/ReportAnthologyResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rasch, A (ed.) 2016, Life Writing After Empire. Routledge.

APA

Rasch, A. (Ed.) (2016). Life Writing After Empire. Routledge.

Vancouver

Rasch A, (ed.). Life Writing After Empire. Routledge, 2016. 156 p.

Author

Rasch, Astrid (Editor). / Life Writing After Empire. Routledge, 2016. 156 p.

Bibtex

@book{8d43255e139744219510f95e055391db,
title = "Life Writing After Empire",
abstract = "A watershed moment of the twentieth century, the end of empire saw upheavals to global power structures and national identities. However, decolonisation profoundly affected individual subjectivities too. Life Writing After Empire examines how people around the globe have made sense of the post-imperial condition through the practice of life writing in its multifarious expressions, from auto/biography through travel writing to oral history and photography. Through interdisciplinary approaches that draw on literature and history alike, the contributors explore how we might approach these genres differently in order to understand how individual life writing reflects broader societal changes. From far-flung corners of the former British Empire, people have turned to life writing to manage painful or nostalgic memories, as well as to think about the past and future of the nation anew through the personal experience. In a range of innovative and insightful contributions, some of the foremost scholars of the field challenge the way we think about narrative, memory and identity after empire. This book was originally published as a special issue of Life Writing.",
editor = "Astrid Rasch",
year = "2016",
month = dec,
language = "English",
isbn = "9781138223219",
publisher = "Routledge",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Life Writing After Empire

A2 - Rasch, Astrid

PY - 2016/12

Y1 - 2016/12

N2 - A watershed moment of the twentieth century, the end of empire saw upheavals to global power structures and national identities. However, decolonisation profoundly affected individual subjectivities too. Life Writing After Empire examines how people around the globe have made sense of the post-imperial condition through the practice of life writing in its multifarious expressions, from auto/biography through travel writing to oral history and photography. Through interdisciplinary approaches that draw on literature and history alike, the contributors explore how we might approach these genres differently in order to understand how individual life writing reflects broader societal changes. From far-flung corners of the former British Empire, people have turned to life writing to manage painful or nostalgic memories, as well as to think about the past and future of the nation anew through the personal experience. In a range of innovative and insightful contributions, some of the foremost scholars of the field challenge the way we think about narrative, memory and identity after empire. This book was originally published as a special issue of Life Writing.

AB - A watershed moment of the twentieth century, the end of empire saw upheavals to global power structures and national identities. However, decolonisation profoundly affected individual subjectivities too. Life Writing After Empire examines how people around the globe have made sense of the post-imperial condition through the practice of life writing in its multifarious expressions, from auto/biography through travel writing to oral history and photography. Through interdisciplinary approaches that draw on literature and history alike, the contributors explore how we might approach these genres differently in order to understand how individual life writing reflects broader societal changes. From far-flung corners of the former British Empire, people have turned to life writing to manage painful or nostalgic memories, as well as to think about the past and future of the nation anew through the personal experience. In a range of innovative and insightful contributions, some of the foremost scholars of the field challenge the way we think about narrative, memory and identity after empire. This book was originally published as a special issue of Life Writing.

M3 - Anthology

SN - 9781138223219

BT - Life Writing After Empire

PB - Routledge

ER -

ID: 170803611