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8 oeuvres 596 utilisateurs 34 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

She is the author of Hidden Writer: Diaries & the Creative Life, which won the PEN/Jerard Fund Award for nonfiction. Her writing has appeared in many national publications including The New Yorker, the New York Times Book Review, & The Nation. She currently teaches memoir writing & creative afficher plus nonfiction at Wellesley College & the Harvard Extension School, where she won the James E. Conway award for distinguished teacher of writing. She lives near Boston. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Alexandra Johnson

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This was a wonderful read and afterwards I ended up buying Many of the autobiographies of the women she wrote about including Alice James, Sophia Tolstoy, Virginia Wolf...
 
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KarenDeLucas | Nov 13, 2023 |
nonfiction; life skills for teens. Not all that useful for adults (and I suspect there are better things out there for teens), but the book is small and not intimidating (for teens that might not want to read a lot) and the cover is attractive.
 
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reader1009 | 26 autres critiques | Jul 3, 2021 |
As the title suggests, this is in fact a brief history of diaries; a very easy read if you have a couple of hours to kill, and would like to learn more about, well, diarists. There's not much more to say: Johnson gives us a couple of pages on the obvious (Pepys, Boswell), the well known (Darwin, Lewis & Clark, Thoreau), and selected authors (Burney, Mansfield, Woolf, Tolstoys). There were two surprises: first, the 'war diaries' section was given over primarily to women (Frank, Chestnut, Hillesum, Iris Origo), which worked very well. Second, the final chapter on 'cyberspace and digital diarists' is intellectually offensive: 12 or so pages about how LIKE THE INTERNET REVOLUTIONISES EVERYTHING AND NOW EVERYTHING IS GREAT BECAUSE WE'RE SHARING AND NOT ASHAMED YOU KNOW? Lest you think I'm exaggerating:

"Twenty-first-century diary keeping is now that perfect mix of confession, self-expression and moral improvement by sharing rather than concealing... Foursquare, a mobile social network, now allows users to tell others where they are located at that precise moment."

Goodbye, Virginia Woolf, today we have Foursquare--making the world a better... wait, does Foursquare even exist anymore? Apparently so. But it's not clear to me what any of this has to do with diaries.

More importantly, the Brief History is determinedly nominalist; no attempts to bring things together (except to point out how GREAT EVERYTHING IS TODAY), little attempt to link the use of diaries to anything outside of diaries. But that's just a reason to read more diaries, and books about diaries. Johnson's book certainly made me want to do that, which is no mean thing.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
stillatim | 1 autre critique | Oct 23, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
8
Membres
596
Popularité
#42,151
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
34
ISBN
17
Langues
1

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