Who Was William Hickey?

Regular price €179.80
A01=James R. Farr
Author_James R. Farr
British colonial history
Carlisle House
Catch Club
Category=NHA
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTQ
Cork Street
cosmopolitanism
culture of sensibility
East Indies
eighteenth-century London
eighteenth-century society
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ethnographic Episodes
Family Friend
George III
Georgian autobiography analysis
Harris's List
Harris’s List
Imperial India
Implicit Cultural Models
King George III
King's Arms Tavern
King’s Arms Tavern
Large Family
Life Span Human Development
life writing studies
masculinity in literature
memory and identity formation
Men's Tears
Men’s Tears
Natural Beauties
Natural Innocence
self-fashioning narratives
Sicca Rupees
Sir John Fielding
Tothill Fields
Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens
William Hickey
William Told
William's Father
William’s Father
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367331191
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book analyzes an example of life-writing, an autobiography that was written in the early nineteenth century and will appeal to readers of many disciplines who are interested in understanding the interconnectedness of memory, textual narrative, and ideas of selfhood. Moreover, this book reasserts the importance of the individual in history. It explains how personal narratives reveal the individual as a purposeful social actor pursuing particular objectives, but framed by cultural and social contexts, in this case by eighteenth-century London and Imperial India. The author of this autobiography, William Hickey, projects a sense of self formed by a combination of an interiorized self-consciousness (an awareness of himself as an autonomous individual, although not one prone to deep self-reflection) and a socially-turned self-fashioning. Like so many autobiographers of his time, Hickey’s self is realized through the production of a narrative, his self fixed and defined through the act of writing. As he wrote his memoirs, Hickey was engaged in purposeful textual representation to satisfy his perceived sense of place in that culture (above all, as a gentleman) while tacitly reflecting the constraints of that culture imposed upon the form and content of the text.

James R. Farr is the Germaine Seelye Oesterle Professor of History at Purdue University. He has published widely in Early Modern European History, notably Artisans in Europe, 1300-1914, A Tale of Two Murders: Passion and Power in Seventeenth Century France, and The Work of France: Labor and Culture in the Early Modern Era, 1300-1800.