Autobiographies

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Titles in the Autobiographies Theme:


In the American Library Association’s Let’s Talk About It theme pamphlet, “The Journey Inward: Women’s Autobiography (1987),” scholar Elizabeth Bauer tell us, “All humans share certain experiences, yet only some have the urge to record these experiences. . . . Memory and truth in autobiography are inextricably related. Sometimes memory lies, sometimes it offers up painful truth; sometimes it gives a writer welcome insights into his or her life and work.” Speculating on the motivation of the author is part of the challenge in reading an autobiography—and what is left out may be as important as what is included.

We invite you to explore, through reading and discussion, some interesting lives—several writers, a Sioux holy man, an anthropologist, an artist, a founding father, a pilot, and several “ordinary” people. All were propelled by their intelligence, curiosity, life circumstances, and a drive to live outside boundaries that allowed them to triumph over adversity and make a mark on the world. Discover what their stories say about the human condition and our lives today.


One Writer’s Beginnings (1984) focuses simultaneously on Welty’s archetypal turn-of-the-century childhood in Mississippi and on her development as a writer. Welty’s notion of "continuous thread of revelation" confirms Estelle Jelinek’s observation about the fragmented nature of women’s autobiography, while providing an exquisite phrase with which to describe how autobiography is written. This slim volume introduces readers to one of the 20th Century's most gifted writers of short stories. Welty writes of the influence of parents, books, trips, and teachers on her writing (American Library Association, 1987).

Further Information on Eudora Welty

http://www.gsu.edu/~wwwewn/
The Eudora Welty Newsletter web site provides current information on Welty including biographical information, a bibliography of her works, frequently asked questions, and access to a discussion listserv dedicated to her.

www.olemiss.edu/depts/english/ms-writers/dir/welty_eudora/
The Mississippi's Writer's Page features a lengthy essay on Welty and her writing and includes period photos.

www.eudorawelty.org/
The Eudora Welty House features the home and garden of the author and is sponsored by the Mississippi Department of Archives and History.

www.nytimes.com/books/98/11/22/specials/welty.html
Featured Author: Eudora Welty. From the archives of The New York Times, this site has links to reviews and articles related to Welty.

www.textsandtech.org/orgs/ews/
The Eudora Welty Society promotes and assists Eudora Welty studies by organizing conferences and special meetings and fosters scholarship among Welty scholars.

http://library.millsaps.edu/library/administration/eudora.shtml
Eudora Welty: A Hometown Perspective web site is maintained by the Millsaps College, located 3 blocks from where Welty lived in Jackson, Mississippi. Welty served as Writer in Residence at the College and was an emerita member of its Board of Trustees.

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West with the Night (1942) recounts Beryl Markham’s childhood in East Africa where she was taken from England at age 4 to be raised by her father, who trained and bred horses. She grew to be an accomplished horsewoman herself, but in the 1930's Markham turned to aviation, flying mail, passengers, and supplies to remote corners of Africa. In 1936, she flew solo crossing of the Atlantic from east to west. Markham’s exploits and adventures are recorded with beauty of language, laced with more than a dollop of bravado. She clearly relishes going where no woman has gone before.

Further Information on Beryl Markham

http://www.karenblixen.com/beryl.html
Markham was a contemporary of author Karen Blixen. Blixen's web site features links to material about Markham, including a biography, study questions, photos, and essays.

http://www.unc.edu/~ottotwo/authorandhero.html
"Author and Hero in West with the Night," a lengthy essay by Robert Viking O'Brien published in The Jouranl of African Travel-Writing, Number 1, September 1996, (pp.14-23). The site is hosted by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

http://www.answers.com/topic/beryl-markham
An entry from Answers.com, a freeonline, ad-supported search service launched in 2005. Answers.com's search results return a snapshot of text culled by editors who use more than 100 sources, including encyclopedias, dictionaries, and atlases.

"Against Prevailing Winds — The Remarkable Life of Beryl Markham" by Jackie Kruper (January/February 2000)
Published on the Woman Pilot™ website, an international news publication profiling the accomplishments, lives and experiences of women involved in aviation.

Book Reviews of West With the Night

http://users.aol.com/dmchess/www/wwn.html
This site provides a well-developed review of West With the Night.

http://www.storycircle.org/Reading_Circle/questions/9902.html
Discussion questions for West with the Night from The Story Circle, Austin Chapter.

Print Resources

Lovell, Mary S. Straight on Till Morning: The Biography of Beryl Markham St Martins Press, 1987. ISBN 0-31201-096-6

Trzebinski, Errol.The Lives of Beryl Markham. New York: W.W. Norton. 1993. ISBN 0-393-03556-5.

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Dust Tracks on a Road (1942) writer and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston’s autobiography, employs the journey metaphor throughout as she describes herself as a "pilgrim" and her life as a journey or "pilgrimage." Hurston recounts an early longing to "walk out to the horizon"; when travel appears to be an impossibility, she takes the alternative so many women have chose: "So I was driven inward. I lived an exciting life unseen." A major figure in the Harlem Renaissance, Hurston died in anonymity only to be rediscovered in the 1980s in African American Studies and Women’s Studies programs. Hurston’s autobiography is the description of her dual journeys–internal and external (American Library Association, 1987).

Further Information on Zora Neal Hurston

http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/hurston.htm
This website provides many links to more biographical information, bibliographies, lesson plans for teachers, and criticism.

http://www-hsc.usc.edu/~gallaher/hurston/hurston.html
This webpage dedicated to Zora Neale Hurston consists of a brief biography, a list of her works, and personal commentary by the author of the page.

www.nathanielturner.com/zoranealehurston.htm
This site has a chronology of important events in the life of Zora Neale Hurston.

www.st-lucie.lib.fl.us/zora/kiosks.htm
The Zora Neale Hurston Dust Tracks Heritage Trail commemorates the life of author through the prism of her years in Fort Pierce, Florida.

Book Review of Dust Tracks on the Road

http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2838/is_n3_v32/ai_21232160
"Zora Neale Hurston and the Post-Modern Self in Dust Tracks on a Road," by Pierre A. Walker, African American Review, 1998.

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My Life (1927) ), the autobiography of dancer Isadora Duncan, begins with the author doubting her ability to express herself in words: "I confess that when it was first proposed to me, I had a terror of writing this book." Duncan also quails before the task of telling the truth about herself. Duncan’s effort to be truthful with her readers results in a candor that is at times sweet, chilling, hilarious, and shocking. She talks of her intellectual absorption: days spent studying Greek vases in the Louvre or building a temple in Athens. She tells us in detail about her sexual encounters and her experience of labor and childbirth. She shares her unorthodox views on marriage and her temptation to commit suicide. Her life was lived on the edge of convention, of financial security, of intellectual currents. The audacity, intensity, and extravagance of this life are reflected in her autobiography (American Library Association, 1987).

Further Information on Isadora Duncan

http://www.isadoraduncan.org/
The Isadora Duncan Foundation for Contemporary Dance homepage features numerous links to additional information on Duncan.

http://www.sfmuseum.org/bio/isadora.html
This website from the Museum of the City of San Francisco provides a lengthy article on Duncan written by Samuel Dickson.

www.isadoraduncaninternationalinstitute.org
The Isadora Duncan International Institute website is committed to the enhancement of education through movement and the arts, drawing from the ideals and principles of Isadora Duncan.

www.pitt.edu/~gillis/dance/isadora.html
Chapter 2: The Solo Dancers: Isadora Duncan by Susan Gillis Kruman, "Introduction to Dance," a web-based tutorial highlights the dance career of Isadora Duncan (with photos).

Book Reviews of My Life

http://www.anndaly.com/articles/duncan.html
"A Fearless Confession Heard Round the World," by Ann Daly, New York Times, December 20, 1998.

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Blackberry Winter (1972) is Margaret Mead’s autobiography which focuses on her personal life: as a granddaughter, daughter, student, wife, mother, and finally, grandmother. She journeys out to exotic places such as Samoa and Bali, but she domesticates that experience by analyzing it in a familial framework. Significantly, Mead names the opening chapter of Part I of Blackberry Winter "Home and Travel." These are not polar opposites for Mead, but integrated experiences: "For me, moving and staying at home, traveling and arriving, are all of a piece." Though Mead’s finding as an anthropologist have been challenged of late, her autobiography will remain cherished. Her memories of childhood, her experiences studying with Franz Boas, her discussion of how and why she married three times, and her reflections on motherhood–all make compelling reading (American Library Association, 1987).

Further Information on Margaret Mead

http://www.wic.org/bio/mmead.htm
This website gives a brief biography of Mead’s life.

http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/mmead.htm
This site gives an extended biography of Mead’s life and a bibliography of her works.

http://www.interculturalstudies.org/Mead/index.html
Sponsored by the Institute for Intercultural Studies, a nonprofit organization founded by Mead in 1944, this web site was created for the Margaret Mead centennial in 2001. It contains a biography and bibliography.

http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/mead/
Human Nature and the Power of Culture is a Library of Congress exhibit featuring the work of Margaret Mead to celebrate her centennial. This rich resources features photos of her early life as well as her contributions to the field of anthropology.

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Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (1962) was initially written to guide Franklin’s son toward self-improvement. This account of Franklin's unique and eventful life has become a classic in world literature, one to inspire and delight readers everywhere.

Information on Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography


earlyamerica.com/lives/franklin
This informative website includes the history of the Autobiography and biographical information on Franklin. It also gives links to access the book (in full text) by chapter on-line.

www.sparknotes.com/lit/franklinautobio/section1.html
This web site is a study guide to the Autobiography, with an overview of the book, section-by-section summaries and commentaries, and questions for review and discussion.

www.english.udel.edu/lemay/franklin/
This site is a complete documentary on Benjamin Franklin categorized by year, composed by J. A. Leo Lemay.

www.ushistory.org/franklin
This extensive site provides a number of on-line documents regarding Franklin, and links to other informative websites.

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A Mormon Mother: An Autobiography (1991) is an autobiography of Annie Clark Tanner, a woman struggling to survive physically and emotionally in a polygamous marriage. Entering into polygamy in 1883 as the second wife of a talented and educated man, she learns to raise her children as well as allow herself to grow into a better person, while remaining loyal to her husband and her religion. Writing in her twilight years, without bitterness, she tells her life as it was, and what it took to persevere.

Further Information on Annie Clark Tanner


http://www.signaturebooks.com/reviews/mother.htm
Two book reviews of A Mormon Mother.

http://www.lightplanet.com/mormons/people/biography.html
"Biography and Autobiography" by Maureen Ursenbach Beecher

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Desert Exile (1982) "Yoshiko Uchida has given us a chronicle of a very special kind of courage, the courage to preserve normalcy and humanity in the face of irrationality and inhumanity. Her family’s story, told in loving detail, brings alive the internment experience and is an important book for all Americans. It is not a history of the decisions that were made during this period, but rather it is the story of the human lives touched and molded by those decisions. As such it is infinitely more important, and infinitely more precious" (United States Senator Daniel K. Inouye).

Information on Yoshiko Uchida


http://pages.sbcglobal.net/gibrich/rpl/Professional/uchida/uchida.htm
This site was prepared for a graduate class at Texas Woman's University's School of Library and Information Studies. It has a wealth of information on Yoshiko Uchida including facts and figures, a bibliography, awards, articles, critical reviews, programming ideas, and a list of links.

www.phschool.com/atschool/literature/author_biographies/uchida_y.html
A biography of the author is on this site prepared by Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voice, Timeless Themes to extend literature with online activities and tests.

Information related to Desert Exile

www.children-of-the-camps.org/
Children of the Camps is a documentary which captures the experiences of 6 Japanese Americans who were confined to internment camps as children during World War II. The site has links to historical documents, a timeline, and a list of internment camps.

http://eduscapes.com/ladders/themes/japanese.htm
Human Rights and the Japanese Internment Experiences provide information for an interdisciplinary, thematic unit. It provides a list of related children's books and links to photographs, historical documents and more.

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I Know Why a Caged Bird Sings (1969) chronicles the life of writer Maya Angelou up to the age of 16. Regarded as a modern Renaissance woman—writer, poet, singer, actress, dancer, playwright, social activist and lecturer--Angelou began life in segregated rural Arkansas. Angelou doesn’t flinch from the brutality of her troubled childhood—she was raped at age 8 by her mother’s boyfriend--but she finds strength in her inner voice to survive and triumph.

Further Information on Maya Angelou

http://www.mayaangelou.com/
Dr. Maya Angelou's official web site.

http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/angelou.htm
This site is a teacher resource file on Angelou which consists of a biography, bibliography of her works, online e-texts, and unit/lesson plans.

http://www.wic.org/bio/mangelou.htm
This site provides a brief biography of Angelou.

http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/angeloubib.htm
The Internet School Library Media Center has a bibliography of Angelou's works.

Book Review and Discussion Guide for I know Why a Caged Bird Sings

http://www.bookclubs.ca/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780553279375&view=rg
This Random House book club site has a brief synopsis of the book and discussion questions.

http://rmmla.wsu.edu/ereview/54.1/reviews/rummell.asp
A review of Joanne M. Braxton's Maya Angelou's I Know Why a Caged Bird Sings, New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. (.pdf)

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Black Elk Speaks (1932) is venerated by many who have become alarmed at the declining spiritual and material quality of life in the age of computers and Star Wars. While the electronic media purvey fragmented images of tragic schisms, Black Elk offers an eloquent and profound vision of the unity of all creation.

Information on John Neihardt

www.nebraskahistory.org/sites/neihardt/
John G. Neihardt State Historic Site has a photo of the author.

www.neihardt.com/jgn/jgnbio.html
This site has a timeline of Neihardt's life.

Links related to Black Elk Speaks

www.si.edu/resource/faq/nmai/naspirit.htm
The Smithsonian Institute's web site includes this page on Native American Spirituality, Religion, and Medicine with a bibliography of related books.

www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap7/blackelk.html
"Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide" (Chapter 7), by Paul P. Reuben, a faculty member in the English Dept. at California State University at Stanislaus, contains study questions and a bibliography of related works.

http://hometown.aol.com/_ht_a/kels3984/Frame6.html
This site hosted by Iguana Productions has links with information about the book, Black Elk and John Neihardt.

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Letters of a Woman Homesteader is the autobiography of Elinore Pruitt Stewart, who homesteaded in Wyoming in the early 1900s. Stewart’s descriptions of nature and friends and work and food are sensory and ebullient, her prose might best be termed reticent when she is discussing marriage and childbirth. This reticence is common in frontier journal of women. The weaving together of Stewart’s letters of ebullience and reticence, joy and sorrow, optimism and perseverance, makes modern life seem bland indeed (American Library Association, 1987).

Information on Elinore Pruitt Steward

http://www.rootsweb.com/~wyoming/ar-stewart.htm
The Elinore Pruitt Stewart Homestead web site features an article by the Sweetwater County Historical Museum.

http://wyoshpo.state.wy.us/stewart.htm
This website has information about the homestead which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Last updated: January 22, 2008 - 10:07am by eric.hildreth