subject predicate object context
69070 Creator ecde7c97c25e024784df5914e5c7e2ae
69070 Date 2016
69070 Is Part Of repository
69070 abstract The earliest recorded use of the term that defines this volume is by a writer from a humble background. Ann Yearsley, the ‘Bristol Milkwoman and Poetess’, attached an ‘Autobiographical Memoir’ to the fourth edition of poems published in 1786 (Falke 2013, 12–3). By the end of the first quarter of the nineteenth century the genre of working-class autobiography had become sufficiently established to attract the attention of the literary establishment. In 1827 John Lockhart introduced the readers of <i>The Quarterly Review</i> to the new voice: <br></br><br></br>The classics of the <i>papier mâché</i> age of our drama have taken up the salutary belief that England expects every driveller to do his Memorabilia. Modern primer-makers must needs leave confessions behind them, as if they were so many Rousseaus. Our weakest mob-orators think it a hard case if they cannot spout to posterity. Cabin-boys and drummers are busy with their commentaries de bello Gallico; the John Gilpins of ‘the nineteenth century’ are historians of their own anabaseis; and, thanks to ‘the march of intellect’, we are already rich in the autobiography of pickpockets. ([Lockhart] 1827, 149).<br></br><br></br>The authors ranged from the obscure to the outcast. Amongst the ten texts arraigned for Lockhart's censure were <i>The Adventures of a Ship-Boy</i>; <i>The Memoirs of John Nicol, Mariner</i>; and <i>The Life of David Haggart, alias John Wilson, Alias John Morison, alias Barney M'coul, alias John M'Colgan, alias Daniel O'Brien, alias the Switcher Written by Himself, while under Sentence of Death</i>. The blame for this corruption of English letters lay not just with the writers but with the marketplace. An epochal change was taking place in the realm of written intercourse. ‘There was … little danger of our having too much autobiography’, wrote Lockhart, ‘as long as no book had much chance of popularity which was not written with some considerable portion of talent, or at least by a person of some considerable celebrity in one way or another. But the circle of readers has widened strangely in these times … It seems as if the ear of that grand impersonation, “the Reading Public,” had become as filthily prurient as that of an eaves-dropping lackey’ ([Lockhart] 1827, 164).
69070 authorList authors
69070 editorList editors
69070 status peerReviewed
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1057898
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1057907
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1057908
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1057909
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1057910
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1057911
69070 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/1058271
69070 type Article
69070 type BookSection
69070 label Vincent, David (2016). Working-class autobiography in the nineteenth century. In: Smyth, Adam ed. A History of English Autobiography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 165–178.
69070 Publisher ext-7dc6ac206349427818537421ac9815ec
69070 Title Working-class autobiography in the nineteenth century
69070 in dataset oro