Textual Intimacy: Autobiography and Religious Identities
ISBN: 9780813932781
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Virginia Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Spiritual journals -- Authorship; Autobiography -- Religious aspects;

Given its affinity with questions of identity, autobiography offers a way into the interior space between author and reader, especially when writers define themselves in terms of religion. In his exploration of this "textual intimacy," Wesley Kort begins with a theorization of what it means to say who one is and how one's self-account as a religious person stands in relation to other forms of self-identification. He then provides a critical analysis of autobiographical texts by nine contemporary American writers--including Maya Angelou, Philip Roth, and Anne Lamott--who give religion a positive place in their accounts of who they are. Finally, in disclosing his own religious identity, Kort concludes with a meditation on several meanings of the word assumption.


Wesley A. Kort, Professor of Religion at Duke University, is the author of Place and Space in Modern Fiction.

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