An examination, taken from published biographies and periodic reviews, such as the Quarterly, of the emerging consensus of what should be contained in a biography, and how it should be presented.
The years 1800 - 1851 mark the period when ideas about biography
were first widely discussed. The critical principles are described as
they evolved against the background of the huge proliferation of biography
which accompanied the "Age of Personality." The past and present were
generously documented with biographies long and short, although reviewers
grew increasingly hostile to redundant and extended works. The emergence
and acceptance of autobiography and literary biography were the most
important innovations.
The complex task of framing an aesthetic for biography is then
described. The major findings are the importance and place given to detail,
the rejection of lifeâand-times and the welcoming of life-and-letters forms
of biography. The argument that biographers should incorporate abundant
original materials is then detailed, as it affected the use of letters,
diaries, autobiography, anecdotes, and conversation. The discrediting
of these original materials by over-use is traced. Lastly, two moralistic
issues are considered; how a biographer might be truthful and yet conform
to powerful demands not to speak unduly ill of the dead or to touch on
taboo subjects, and the writing of biography for utilitarian purposes.
During the period biography was reviewed extensively for the first
time, and reviews and independent assessments provide a large amount of material.
Although the findings interestingly reflect the age at many points, nothing
like a Romantic theory of biography emerges. Rather, the period established
the major areas of biographical discussion, which are little altered 150 years
later. The thesis deals also with unfamiliar areas of the work of many of
the best known writers of the generation.<p