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- Q1162976 subject Q5640343.
- Q1162976 abstract "Metabiography is the literary study of the relation of biographies to the temporal, geographical, institutional, intellectual or ideological locations of their writers (the biographers). It is a hermeneutics of biography that sees the biographical subject (the “biographee”) as a collective construct of different memory cultures, proposing an essential instability of historical lives. In the words of Steven Shapin, metabiography stresses “that shifting biographical traditions make one person have many lives,” none of these necessarily more real than any other, because all are “configured and reconfigured according to the sensibilities and needs of the changing cultural settings.” In this sense, metabiography expresses a belief in the observer-dependence of historical knowledge.".
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q102686.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q1673758.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q1778796.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q255.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q34969.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q36279.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q37970.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q39607.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q5585778.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q5640343.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q574613.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q6149856.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q6696380.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q80137.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q907710.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q935.
- Q1162976 wikiPageWikiLink Q967777.
- Q1162976 comment "Metabiography is the literary study of the relation of biographies to the temporal, geographical, institutional, intellectual or ideological locations of their writers (the biographers). It is a hermeneutics of biography that sees the biographical subject (the “biographee”) as a collective construct of different memory cultures, proposing an essential instability of historical lives.".
- Q1162976 label "Metabiography".