

Author: Peterson Linda
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 0969-9082
Source: Women's Writing, Vol.6, Iss.2, 1999-07, pp. : 261-278
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Abstract
Oliphant's Autobiography has often been read as split between two traditions of life writing – a professional artist's account of her life and work and a family memoir of domestic incident and private recollection – and thus as displaying the tensions inevitable within the life of the nineteenth-century woman writer. In this article the author reconsiders the Autobiography in literary historical terms and argues that Oliphant meant to write a literary life that resolved ideologically the tensions between motherhood and authorship. The Autobiography takes as its basis the Victorian domestic memoir and incorporates the professional artist's life story within it by making that story part of a family's professional achievement. Her account, intended for “my boys”, could thus be seen not just as a private or individual document but as a collaborative or communal history, one including her own literary achievement as well as her sons' entry into the profession of letters.
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