Discovering the Roots of Autobiography and Autoethnography in the Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau: A Dialogue
Radical Interactionism and Critiques of Contemporary Culture
ISBN: 978-1-83982-029-8, eISBN: 978-1-83982-028-1
Publication date: 30 April 2021
Abstract
This is a two-voice autoethnographic dialogue about Rousseau's Confessions and their relevance for the contemporary autoethnograpy. The paper examines the possibility that Rousseau was not only the creator of modern autobiography but also a forerunner of autoethnography. Many features of the Rousseau's masterpiece are analyzed and systematically compared to our contemporary autoethnographic sensibility: the purposes which brought him to write an outstandingly detailed description of his life; the fact that he acknowledges autobiography as the only source of true knowledge; his obsession for sincerity and his strong will to disclose all the truth about his own life to his readers (included the dreadful things that he did); the authority that he assigned to the readers in deciding about the truthfulness of his tale; his concern for the ethical issues and the care of the others; and the therapeutic value that he recognized to the practice of writing about themselves. In the end, Jean-Jacques was not only extraordinarily able to use his emotions to analyze human nature, but also he was a radical autobiographer at the limits of intransigence. His considerations on the value of autobiography can help us greatly to legitimize contemporary autoethnographic practice.
Keywords
Citation
Pop, A. and Marzano, M. (2021), "Discovering the Roots of Autobiography and Autoethnography in the
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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