MEMOIR

As a literary genre, a 'memoir' (from the French: ''mémoire'' from the Latin ''memoria'', meaning "memory") forms a subclass of autobiography, although it is an older form of writing. Memoirs may appear less structured and less encompassing than formal autobiographical works as they are usually about part of a life rather than the chronological telling of a life from childhood to adulthood/old age. Like most autobiographies, memoirs are generally written from the first person point of view.
Gore Vidal, in his own memoir ''Palimpsest'', writes that "a memoir is how one remembers one's own life, while an autobiography is history, requiring research, dates, facts double-checked." It is more about what can be gleaned from a section of one's life than about the outcome of the life as a whole.
A "Memoirist" is a person who helps others write their memoirs.

Contents
History
Famous authors of memoirs (listed alphabetically)
See also

History


Memoirs have often been written by politicians or military leaders as a way to record and publish an account of their public exploits. In the eighteenth century, "scandalous memoirs" were written (mostly anonymously) by prostitutes or libertines: these were widely read in France for their vulgar details and gossip. In another vein, the pagan rhetor Libanius framed his life memoir as one of his orations, not the public kind, but the literary kind that would be read aloud in the privacy of one's study. This kind of memoir refers to the idea in ancient Greece and Rome, that memoirs were like "memos," pieces of unfinished and unpublished writing which a writer might use as a memory aid to make a more finished document later on.
The term "memoir" has begun to replace "autobiography" in its popular use. Recently, several American professional writers such as David Sedaris, Augusten Burroughs and Dave Eggers have become famous almost solely for writing interesting or amusing memoirs.
Women writers have been in the forefront of combining the memoir form with historical non-fiction writing, which can be seen in Helen Epstein's Czech-based ''Where She Came From: A Daughter's Search for her Mother's History'' and Jung Chang's Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China. Maxine Hong Kingston's well known book ''The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts'' is also an example of a memoir that combines factual material with fictional material as it tells the author's story and the story of her family.
Another category of memoir is the eyewitness account to history by private citizens; Slave narratives fall into this category as do Holocaust memoirs, such as by Primo Levi, Heda Kovaly, and Elie Wiesel.

Famous authors of memoirs (listed alphabetically)



Martin Amis

Maya Angelou

Augustine of Hippo

Russell Baker

Alexander Berkman

Anthony Bourdain

Carol Burnett

Augusten Burroughs

Mitch Albom

Roger Caron

Giacomo Casanova

Bill Clinton

Frank Conroy

Jill Ker Conway

Samuel R. Delany

Annie Dillard

Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen)

Bob Dylan

Margaretta Eagar

Helen Epstein

Marianne Faithfull

James Frey

Mahatma Gandhi

Ulysses S. Grant

Patricia Hampl

Basil Liddell Hart

Homer Hickam

Fanny Hill by John Cleland

Mary Karr

Tracy Kidder

Maxine Hong Kingston

Miklós Horthy

Primo Levi

Phillip Lopate

Lorna Luft

Mary McCarthy

Frank McCourt

Pervez Musharraf

Vladimir Nabokov

Richard Nixon

Maureen O'Hara

Irene Gut Opdyke

George Orwell

Jan Chryzostom Pasek

Harvey Pekar

William Alexander Percy

Calel Perechodnik

Andrew X. Pham

Sylvia Plath

Pyrrhus of Epirus (''On the Art of War'')

Louis de Rouvroy, Duc de Saint-Simon

Anthony Rapp

Anne Robinson

Siegfried Sassoon

Kate Simon

David Sedaris

Albert Speer (''Inside the Third Reich'')

Władysław Szpilman (''The Pianist'')

Calvin Trillin

Leon Trotsky

Elie Wiesel

Tobias Wolff

Elizabeth Wurtzel

Paramahansa Yogananda

See also



List of political memoirs

MemoryArchive, a wiki collecting memories

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves