Textual History: Biographical Resources Course Information |
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Chronology | Links Biographical Resources Primary biographical sources: A Writer's Letters and Journals Read through the letters to see if you can identify the general period of the text's composition and publication, and for the writer's reactions to contemporary reviews. For composition, look for information on issues like the following:
Trace the author's ideas about and feelings toward the text. You could ask some of the following questions:
For publication, look for information on issues like the following:
For comments about reviews, look for information on issues like the following:
Also, look for the writer's later comments on the text.
Three editions of Byron's collected letters and journals have been published: one shortly after Byron's death, published by his friend, Thomas Moore; and another in 1903, edited by Rowland E. Prothero; and one in the 1970s-1980s compiled and edited by Leslie A. Marchand. Marchand's multi-volume edition is on reserve: remember though that Marchand's edition does not completely supercede Prothero's, in that Prothero's notes are still valuable. Secondary biographical sources: Letters and journals by Others Published collections of letters and journals--unless dedicated to a particular correspondence--typically only provide one side of the conversation (the letters of the author under consideration.) As a result, it's often good to get the other writer's perspective, if their letters have been published as well. Now it seems like one ought to be able to identify correspondents simply from looking at the correspondent's lists in the published letters and journals. Certainly, that's a first step, but sometimes letters or whole groups of correspondence don't survive on one side of the exchange, but relics remain on the other side. So, use biographies of your writer to identify who might also be a likely correspondent, then check out their indices to see if your writer is mentioned or is a correspondent. If you can locate such additional references, ask how do the writer's friends, colleagues and other corrrespondents respond to the publication of the text, its ideas, the reviews, etc. "Conversations" For more recent writers, this category would include interviews, lectures, etc. In the nineteenth-century, many people familiar with a famous person might publish their memories of their conversations, in the tradition of Boswell's Life of Johnson.Several "conversations" with Lord Byron come out after his death; of those, the most respectable is Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington's. You can find it in our library in the Ernest Lovell edition. Memoirs of Contemporaries Often such memoirs are published decades later, thus their recollections are filtered through later events. As such, the recollections might be affected by a rise or fall in the reputation of the writer, by a later falling-out or reconciliation, etc. Sometimes one can gather information from such sources that is unattainable otherwise, but one must represent their information with the appropriate level of care. Biographies Biographies are good for offering a sense of a life, a trajectory of events. In general, though, it's a good idea not to be too accepting of their assertions. Biographies are often written to popular rather than academic standards, sometimes by professional biographers rather than by specialists in the author or in the field. The job of a biographer, then, is to give a reader a coherent narrative and a sense of psychological motivation, even when concrete evidence of such is lacking. As such, use biographies to get a sense of the trajectory of an author's life, not for an accurate "reading" of their beliefs, personality, or reactions. The Byron biography considered most authoritative has been for many years Leslie Marchard's 1957 three-volume Byron: A Biography, updated and condensed into the 1970 one-volume, Byron: A Portrait. In 2002, Fiona MacCarthy published Byron: Life and Legend based on her work in the John Murray archive.
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