This thesis examines the perceptions and practices of self-writing between 1700 and 1850 as products of the burgeoning information culture of the age. It demonstrates how priorities of information management and the shared, cultural valuing of knowledge shaped the way individuals wrote about themselves in an array of forms over the course of the period. In particular, it asserts that the arrival of the pre-structured diary in 1748 was a significant development because it confirmed and enacted the perception of selfwriting as a factual, empirical pursuit. By requesting the entry of brief 'data' into an essentially scientific form, the table, it made writing about the self an empirical, forensic exercise. This thesis finds that the pr...
This article examines the growth of interest in diary keeping in twentieth-century Britain. It explo...
The almanac genre was immensely popular throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yet pub...
Diaries present a valuable source for historical research. They provide an insight into the lives of...
This thesis examines the perceptions and practices of self-writing between 1700 and 1850 as products...
Throughout the letter press era of the eighteenth century, manuscript (“written by hand”) writing en...
In recent years self-tracking technologies have become widely adopted. Life-writing scholars have co...
Using the diaries of Jean Lucey Pratt as a case study, the article assesses the impact of the availa...
How did individuals write about their lives before a modern tradition of diaries and autobiographies...
During the early part of the eighteenth century, the growth of the book trades depended upon a serie...
The author of the article presents in a concise way the history and geology of memoir writing as a d...
Symbols, encryptions and codes are a way to hide sensitive or highly personal content in diaries. Th...
In this paper, in order to confirm the relationship between the ego and the other, I checked the wor...
An international conference organized by the “Enlightenment and modernity” project of the LARCA (Lab...
This paper examines the diary of Charles Blagden, physician and secretary of the Royal Society betw...
An exploration of one of the most common but least studied early modern forms of life-writing, the a...
This article examines the growth of interest in diary keeping in twentieth-century Britain. It explo...
The almanac genre was immensely popular throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yet pub...
Diaries present a valuable source for historical research. They provide an insight into the lives of...
This thesis examines the perceptions and practices of self-writing between 1700 and 1850 as products...
Throughout the letter press era of the eighteenth century, manuscript (“written by hand”) writing en...
In recent years self-tracking technologies have become widely adopted. Life-writing scholars have co...
Using the diaries of Jean Lucey Pratt as a case study, the article assesses the impact of the availa...
How did individuals write about their lives before a modern tradition of diaries and autobiographies...
During the early part of the eighteenth century, the growth of the book trades depended upon a serie...
The author of the article presents in a concise way the history and geology of memoir writing as a d...
Symbols, encryptions and codes are a way to hide sensitive or highly personal content in diaries. Th...
In this paper, in order to confirm the relationship between the ego and the other, I checked the wor...
An international conference organized by the “Enlightenment and modernity” project of the LARCA (Lab...
This paper examines the diary of Charles Blagden, physician and secretary of the Royal Society betw...
An exploration of one of the most common but least studied early modern forms of life-writing, the a...
This article examines the growth of interest in diary keeping in twentieth-century Britain. It explo...
The almanac genre was immensely popular throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yet pub...
Diaries present a valuable source for historical research. They provide an insight into the lives of...