Last modified: 4 Days, 21 Hours, 21 Minutes ago
What is at stake in writing autobiographical texts? What are the forms writers have used to write themselves? Is autobiography simply, as Oscar Wilde states, the lowest form of criticism? Looking at a range of texts from the Medieval period to the present, with a special focus on women’s writing, this course examines the formal, ethical, political, and aesthetic choices writers make when writing themselves.
Study Type | Postgraduate | Level | 5 |
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Term | Second Term | Credit Points | 30 credits (15 ECTS credits) |
Campus | Aberdeen | Sustained Study | No |
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Life writing lies between literature and history; it often challenges the distinction between fact and fiction. It can be a form of political subversion, or a form of private reflection. This course explores a wide range of life writing, from the Medieval period to the present, in order to look at the formal, ethical, political, and aesthetic choices writers make when writing themselves. The course particularly focuses on women’s life writing; incorporating a variety of material from diaries and poems to essays and experimental fiction, it showcases both the challenges and rewards of this most private, most public form of expression. Selected authors may include Margery Kempe, Frederick Douglass, Virginia Woolf, and Alison Bechdel.
Information on contact teaching time is available from the course guide.
Assessment Type | Summative | Weighting | 20 | |
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Assessment Weeks | Feedback Weeks | |||
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Word Count: 1,500 |
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Assessment Type | Summative | Weighting | 80 | |
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Assessment Weeks | Feedback Weeks | |||
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• 1 mid-term critical essay, 2,500 words OR practice-based (piece of life writing including a critical commentary of at least 1000 words, with the assignment to be 2,500 words in total (35%) |
Knowledge Level | Thinking Skill | Outcome |
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There are no assessments for this course.
Assessment Type | Summative | Weighting | 100 | |
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Assessment Weeks | Feedback Weeks | |||
Feedback | Word Count | 5000 |
Knowledge Level | Thinking Skill | Outcome |
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Knowledge Level | Thinking Skill | Outcome |
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Procedural | Analyse | Students will understand the difference between multiple forms of life writing and the relevant theories used to discuss them. |
Conceptual | Understand | Students will demonstrate understanding of autobiographical texts from multiple periods, and their relation to historical and social contexts. |
Conceptual | Apply | In written and oral forms, students will demonstrate the ability to apply theories of life-writing to chosen texts. |
Procedural | Create | In written and oral forms, students will produce analyses of chosen texts demonstrating an awareness of the ways gender, class, and race impact the creation of autobiographical texts. |
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