Definition
Life writing is a broad generic category encompassing a myriad of diverse literary subgenres related to autobiographical storytelling. The qualities a piece of writing must possess in order to be classified under the umbrella term of "life writing" has been up for debate, as what constitutes life writing has been continually altered and redefined throughout history. Approaches to defining life writing have ranged from establishing loose criteria for its generic language and style – its form – to evaluating its content, topic, and context – its substance. Despite the sizeable ambiguity revolving around the term, scholars have expressed a sustained general consensus about what life writing entails. Life writing has been determined to be generally nonfictive as well as closely associated with two themes: the genre of theHistorical uses
Identity and self-reflection
Amassing popularity in the early modern period, life writing has been utilized by individuals as a method of exploring the complex dimensions of their identity. In the act of life writing, individuals are encouraged to comprehend what specific facet of their identity most prominently shapes the whole of it, whether that be one affiliated with the romantic, spiritual, racial, gendered, socio-economic, or familial. Because life writing prompts an individual to evaluate themselves personally, it concurrently motivates them to understand themselves not only as isolated and solitary beings but also as a product of numerous external influences pertaining to society and culture. In this manner, life writing is regarded as an outlet for "self-collection," wherein an individual gathers information gradually about themselves by the two-fold means of internal introspection as well as contemplation of outward forces. Life writing consequently bridges the public and the private, creating a union of contexts that ultimately manifests itself within the writing of an individual. Life writing for the aim of further discovering an individual's identity becomes a meaning-making activity, one that entails making sense of the world and the experiences they endure within it.Presentation of the self and form of resistance
Individuals have employed life writing to fabricate a certain image of themselves in order to control how they appeal to others as well as to themselves. Through the subjectivity of life writing, individuals are imbued with the option to represent who they are by either attempting to objectively recount their experiences or by crafting a version of themselves they ideally imagine to be through purposeful or subconscious deliberation. This use of life writing has been historically represented in relation to gender, as cultural assumptions ingrained within the fabric of society have often hindered individuals from deviating from their assigned social roles and achieving their ideal selves. Commencing in first half of the 16th century, women utilized diaries, a genre of life writing, to craft their own personas. For example, Anne Askew through her autobiography ''The Examinations of Anne Askew'' attempted to convince herself of her religious nature and her involvement within her church. Katherine Austen in the 17th century portrayed herself as a widowed evangelist. Likewise, Anne Clifford in her personal diary depicted herself predominantly as a woman in possession of property rather than through the traditional social role of an "obedient wife." In order to stray away from societal expectations, Dionys Fitzherbert in her autobiographical writings in the 17th century refuses to acknowledge her own mental illness, denying its existence in order lessen the strength of the cultural association between femininity and hysteria. Through this personal control of narrative, life writing allows individuals to exercise their sense of authority in deciding what to reveal about themselves. In addition to women, men have also found refuge in the genres of life writing, particularly through that of the journal. In such autobiographical pieces, men fashioned themselves in alignment with cultural assumptions. Simon Forman and Thomas Whythorne within their autobiographies play into the traditional notions of masculine traits--power and strength-- within their portrayal of themselves as being objects of pursuit by the opposite sex. Life writing, through the presentation of the self, has simultaneously served as a private form of resistance for individuals. Individuals writing pieces that exemplify life writing experiment with the subversion of socio-cultural norms, stereotypes, and over-generalizations. They challenge how others perceive themselves, consequently enabling them to acquire an individual autonomy through their writing and thus personal fulfillment and satisfaction.Emotional space
Life writing has been used as a generic outlet for individuals to explore and evaluate their emotions. In narrating one's life, an individual is placed in a position to purposefully choose certain words to describe how they are feeling, which has been demonstrated to provide increased self-clarity. Life writing in this manner assists in formally recognizing that an event has happened. For example, in being able to articulate the passing of her child through life writing, a mother was able to identify as well as use her writing as a resource to cope with her grief. Life writing, too, has been claimed to assist individuals banished from certain social communities to register and manage the circumstances of their exiles. While life writing allowed individuals to accept the occurrence of a situation, it also functioned as a place to investigate primitive desires and voice secret aspirations. In the 17th century, Thomas Whythone and Anne Clifford within their autobiographical writings navigated sexual tensions and the power dynamics existing between those engaging in the intimate act. Furthermore, individuals use forms of life writing such as the diary to convey personal opinions on political topics pertaining to their temporal period. Life writing in this way enables individuals to place history within their own perspective.Memory
When information is recorded as a form of life writing, it takes up the quality of permanence embedded within it. Life writing enables an individual to retain otherwise fleeting emotions and feelings as well as history about one's personal growth and family environment. As a reference for stimulating recollection of the past, life writing preserves traditions, events, and experiences so that they may transcend the confines of time. Because it keeps the past animate within the present, life writing permits an individual to adopt an outsider's perspective on their past experiences; they are given the ability to examine the life choices they made as well as their upbringing and relationships more critically in order to increase their understanding of themselves. Recording one's experiences through life writing also enables intellectual activity and cognitive stimulation, resulting in the effect of strengthening memory and subsequently lowering the individual risk of dementia and Alzheimers. In the permanence of information within life writing, individuals suffering from loss of memory can recall their experiences in their authentic initial forms.Benefits
Psychological and cognitive welfare
Studies of life writing have affirmed its psychological and cognitive benefits. Life writing can facilitate a fluid expression of feeling, a shift in personal thinking, and the development of self-control and confidence, especially within individuals possessive of low self-esteem. Expressive writing as a relative mode of life writing has been a technique involved in fostering an individual's psychological and cognitive well-being. It is a technique wherein one can write freely concerning their emotions about a personal difficult experience without worrying about linguistic and structural constraints. Such difficult experiences that may be reflected upon in this type of writing include physical and health issues, witnessing environmental catastrophes, and first-hand interactions with violence. In a study conducted by Charles Matthew Stapleton and his colleagues, they find that individuals who use writing to cope obtain a strength of mind that prevents self-criticism and doubt from holding dominion. As a result of writing about a difficult experience, these individuals exhibited a decrease in distress, a healthy management of stress and anxiety, the increased acquisition of a positive mood, and became less cognitively avoidant of acknowledging the particular event. Because they are able to organize and interpret the difficult experience they encountered on their own terms through their writing, the subjects within the study were able to integrate the experiences into their repertoire of identity, amassing the courage to face it head-on. Autobiographical writing enables personal issues to be dealt with intentionally and practically. As individuals involve themselves with their own life writing, they reduce the mental and associated physical burden of having to suppress secrets or negative events by transferring the emotional weight and cognitive load onto paper. Within the aforementioned study by Stapleton, individuals reported increased gratitude and relief in releasing pent-up contemplations through personal autobiographical narration.Reconciliation of the selves
Life writing has been employed by individuals to reexamine, redefine, rearrange, and retell their life stories. Yue Gu has championed that life writing is a conversation occurring between the two different selves of an individual. Self 1 is the foundational self, the one that actually endured the experience in the past, whereas Self 2 is the self in the present, writing the autobiographical narrative and looking back at the past. Because Self 2 is situated in the present, the individual takes on the position of a counselor and guide to their self in the past.The individual in this sense is able to break through previously maintained assumptions through empathizing, validating, and forgiving the self within their past. Life writing in this way allows for the merging of the two selves, a self-unity that permits one to view time collectively, with a new outlook and sense of meaning. The individual becomes in sync with their authentic selves, allowing them to heal from within. For example, Suzette A. Hencke, in her study of women's life writing, showed that life writing offered women writers the opportunity to put narrator and participant in conversation with one another in order to re-integrate parts of the self that were fragmented by trauma. In such a case, life writing allowed individuals to assume both the role of the "client" and "therapist" in themselves. Life writing has not only occurred in solitude but also has been opened for collaboration as well. Professionals within the realm of medicine, therapy, and education utilize life writing as a technique for individuals to better understand their motives for acting, thinking, and feeling. These professionals serve almost as "writing coaches," offering feedback and guidance for individuals as they come to revelatory conclusions from authoring their own life stories. Life writing has also been determined to help an individual better understand the purpose they have in the world. In 1975, psychologist Ira Progoff identified the positive psychological benefits that journal writing, or autobiographical writing, could have on one's self-concept. The findings of Progoff's research demonstrated that an intensive journal method could "draw each person's life towards wholeness at its own tempo." Life writing in systematic sections mediates between past and present and creates a continuity of the self that can further be improved.Academic study
There are now Centres for Life Writing Research at theExamples
Life writing has been evident for nearly 2,000 years.See also
* Narrative identityReferences
{{reflistFurther reading
* Jolly, Margaretta (ed). 2001. ''The Encyclopedia of Life Writing. Autobiographical and Biographical Forms''. Routledge, London and New York. * Epstein, Helen. 2010. ''Écrire La Vie. La Cause des Livres''. Paris.External links