Introduction
Biographies are in many ways history. The people who are considered important subjects and how their lives are documented often reflect the bent of the cultures that produce them. The nineteenth century in America saw the rise of the celebrity system. Periodicals grew in number, many of them featuring flattering (and sanitized/fictionalized) biographies of stage actors and other celebrities. Following the turn of the twentieth century, biographies were forever changed by Sigmund Freud and the advent of psychoanalysis. No longer simply records of the events of a person’s life, biographies were now designed to get inside their subjects’ heads. The increasing proliferation of celebrity culture in the late twentieth and early-twenty-first centuries led to two less reputable subgenres: the unauthorized biography and the “tell-all,” both of which use questionable sources and/or the testimony of disgruntled family members, former friends, and jilted paramours.
Essential Facts
- Medieval biographies mostly chronicled the lives of saints and martyrs. This discipline developed into its own genre called hagiography.
- Though extremely common in the twenty-first century, the first dictionary of biography appeared in the mid-sixteenth century.
- In the Romantic period, the focus of biographies shifted from saints to poets. Throughout, historical figures remained a staple of the genre.
- Technology has rendered biographical data even more accessible as many documents and articles can be accessed through online sites and databases.
- One long-running TV series, Biography, chronicles the lives of notable people in history and popular culture. The series has been so prolific that it generated a spin-off network, The Biography Channel.
Recommended Resources
All Resources
- American Civil War Biographies
- American Home Front WWII Biographies
- American Revolution Biographies
- Anton Chekhov Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Arthur Miller Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Cold War Biographies
- Colonial America Biographies
- Crime and Punishment in America Biographies
- Crusades Biographies
- Development of the Industrial US Biographies
- Edgar Allan Poe Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Emily Dickinson Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Great Depression and New Deal Biographies
- Herman Melville Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Industrial Revolution Biographies
- James Joyce Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- John Steinbeck Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Langston Hughes Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Middle Ages Biographies
- Middle East Conflict Biographies
- Nathaniel Hawthorne Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Presidential Biographies
- Protestant Hagiography and Martyrology
- Reconstruction Era Biographies
- Renaissance and Reformation Biographies
- Roaring Twenties Biographies
- Robert Frost Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Saul Bellow Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Shaping of America 1783-1815 Biographies
- Slavery Biographies
- Sylvia Plath and the Nature of Biography
- Tennessee Williams Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Terrorism Reference Biographies
- The Challenge of Feminist Biography (Magill Book Reviews)
- The Interpretation of Dreams Summary / Study Guide
- The Sixties in America Biographies
- US Immigration and Migration Biographies
- Vietnam War Biographies
- Vladimir Nabokov Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- Walt Whitman Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- War in the Persian Gulf Biographies
- Westward Expansion Biographies
- William Faulkner Biography / Profile - Salem on Literature
- William Shakespeare Biography
- World War I Biographies
- World War II Biographies
