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Intimate reading:

the contemporary women's memoir
Front Cover
2 Reviews
Syracuse University Press, 2001 - Literary Collections - 234 pages
An innovative study of the contemporary memoir blending autobiography and literary analysis to illuminate the intellectual, cultural and emotional dynamics of life writing.Maintaining that the memoir requires a more personal relationship with its readers and critics, Janet Mason Ellerby calls for "intimate readings". She begins this work with her own memoir, narrating a long-held secret -- her pregnancy at age sixteen, her life in the Florence Crittendon Home for Unwed Mothers, and the birth and adoption of her first daughter. She goes on to tell about the aftermath of this pivotal time in and the painful consequences of keeping a secret.Included are detailed analyses of more than a dozen contemporary memoirs by American women, all of which share a common purpose: the disclosure of secrets. Ellerby describes the costs of this secrecy and explores the possibilities of breaking intractable codes of silence. It is a study that is germane to the intellectual and emotional lives of all women.This book is the first serious exploration of a genre that has gained acceptance with an expanding audience of readers. Ellerby maintains that the efforts of memoirists to plumb their painful pasts has cultural significance and precipitates important social work. The memoir joins fiction and autobiography as an important commentary on modern life.
  

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Review: Intimate Reading: The Contemporary Women's Memoir

User Review  - Theryn Fleming - Goodreads

Intimate Reading takes a feminist approach to memoir, focusing in particular memoirs of the confessional vein, with the author first revealing her own long-held secret. She examines the shift from a ... Read full review

Review: Intimate Reading: The Contemporary Women's Memoir

User Review  - Heather - Goodreads

This book was written by a professor of mine at UNCW. Her story is amazing! Knowing her made her story closer to me, so I cried a bit in the first couple chapters. Gripping and important. Read full review

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Contents

Bearing Sorrow
3
Two Family Secrets
31
Audience and Memoir
71
Narratives of Trauma
130
Narratives of Mental Illness
154
Who Can Tell?
176
The Memoir at Work
192
Copyright

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About the author (2001)

Ellerby is associate professor and women's studies coordinator in the Department of English at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington.

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