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Chapter 1 - “A Vile Symptom”: Autobiography and the Commodification of Identity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2019

Sean Grass
Affiliation:
Rochester Institute of Technology, New York
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Summary

The rise of autobiography as a commercial genre during the first half of the nineteenth century was, in its way, one of the decisive developments of the Victorian period in England. Amid a growing culture of celebrity, a maturing literary market, and the broad social concussions caused by England’s transformation into a modern industrial state, autobiography’s commercial rise embodied the emerging relations between the Victorian subject and the capitalist market and made the commodification of identity an explicit and unsettling feature of the age. John Gibson Lockhart’s essay in the January 1827 Quarterly Review illustrates just how unsettling, turning a review of ten recent autobiographies into a fierce attack on this new and unaccountable tendency to textualize and commodify the self.

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The Commodification of Identity in Victorian Narrative
Autobiography, Sensation, and the Literary Marketplace
, pp. 17 - 77
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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