After Franklin
The Emergence of Autobiography in Post-Revolutionary America, 1780–1830
Stephen Carl Arch

Becoming Modern: New Nineteenth-Century Studies
University of New Hampshire Press
University Press of New England

2001 • 255 pp. 6 x 9"
Literature & Language-American / American Studies / Biography & Letters

$26.00 Paper, 1-58465-132-6





An analysis of the foundations of autobiography in America.

Although much has been written about Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography, other writers of what Stephen Arch calls “self-biographies” in post-revolutionary America have received scant scholarly attention. This rich variety of texts dramatically shows the complex nature of 19th-century concepts of identity. Arguing that “autobiography” is a modern invention, Arch shows its emergence in the older, conservative self-biographies of Alexander Graydon, Benjamin Rush, and Ethan Allen and in the newer, more progressive, and even radical self-biographies of K. White, Elizabeth Fisher, Stephen Burroughs, and John Fitch. Describing the evolution of a concept as elastic as “the self” is not easy, but Arch offers a unique and imaginative study of the emergence of a specifically modern American identity.








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