Pathography
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# A [[biography]] by a physician exploring the effects a disease may have had on a person's life. | # A [[biography]] by a physician exploring the effects a disease may have had on a person's life. | ||
- | + | "Here it was that [[Augustus Schlegel]] erred when he thought that the sonnets would afford material for a fresh biography of Shakspeare. They do not ... They are not so much biography, as, if we may be allowed to coin a word, pathography." wrote someone in 1852. | |
- | "They are not so much biography, as, if we may be allowed to coin a word, pathography," wrote someone in 1852. | + | |
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[[Joyce Carol Oates]] called [[warts-and-all]] [[biographer]]s ''[[pathographer]]s''. | [[Joyce Carol Oates]] called [[warts-and-all]] [[biographer]]s ''[[pathographer]]s''. |
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- A biography that focuses on faults, unlucky circumstances, failures, and other negative aspects of the person's life.
- A biography by a physician exploring the effects a disease may have had on a person's life.
"Here it was that Augustus Schlegel erred when he thought that the sonnets would afford material for a fresh biography of Shakspeare. They do not ... They are not so much biography, as, if we may be allowed to coin a word, pathography." wrote someone in 1852.
Joyce Carol Oates called warts-and-all biographers pathographers. [1]
See also
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Pathography" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.