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Book Review

Private Lives Made Public: The Invention of Biography in Early Modern England. Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne UP, 2016. x + 206pp. ISBN 13: 9780820704821. $70.00 (cloth)

Details

Citation

Williams KJ (2017) Private Lives Made Public: The Invention of Biography in Early Modern England. Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne UP, 2016. x + 206pp. ISBN 13: 9780820704821. $70.00 (cloth). Milton Quarterly, 51 (2), pp. 138-140. https://doi.org/10.1111/milt.12206

Abstract
First paragraph: On the final page of this volume, Andrea Walkden writes what could also be both its beginning and its battle©\cry: ¡°from the royal memoir to the merest minute, the early modern life has always invited misrecognition¡± (165). This is only too true. From the era of classic works such as Donald Stauffer's English Biography Before 1700 (1930) until surprisingly recently, early modern biographies have been approached with a strange lack of critical acumen, a desire to enumerate but not to analyze, and a peculiar detachment from any larger historical or generic awareness. It is greatly to Walkden's credit that she has consciously and decisively repudiated this tradition in favor of a new, more critical approach to some of the central works of the early modern biographical canon.

Keywords
Literature and Literary Theory

Notes
Output Type: Book Review

Journal
Milton Quarterly: Volume 51, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2017
Publication date online20/07/2017
Date accepted by journal24/04/2017
PublisherWiley
ISSN0026-4326
eISSN1094-348X

People (1)

Dr Kelsey Williams

Dr Kelsey Williams

Associate Professor, English Studies