Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Victorian Autobiography - Sara Murphy (essay date winter 2001)
Victorian Autobiography - Sara Murphy (essay date winter 2001)
Sara Murphy (essay date winter 2001)
SOURCE: Murphy, Sara. “The Trials of Vision: Experience and Autobiography in Charlotte Brontë and Charlotte Tonna.” a/b: Auto/Biography Studies 16, no. 2 (winter 2001): 199-218.
[In the following essay, Murphy considers the nature of Victorian literary self-representation through comparison of Charlotte Brontë's semi-autobiographical novel Jane Eyre and Charlotte Tonna's spiritual autobiography Personal Recollections.]
Autobiography and experience are inexorably linked. What after all is an autobiography but the story of how one has become who one is? One of the fundamental tenets of modernity has been that one's identity is created, shaped, informed by experience—of the environment, of others, of oneself. To put experience somehow into a narrative form is the autobiographer's task. Yet “experience” itself is not an unvexed category. Experience often seems a synonym for the...
[The entire page is 8994 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
