Autofiction is, in literary criticism, a form of fictionalized autobiography.
Definition
In autofiction, an author may decide to recount their life in the third person, to modify significant details and characters, use invented subplots and imagined scenarios with real-life characters in the service of a search for self. In this way, autofiction shares similarities with the Bildungsroman as well as the New Narrative movement and has parallels with faction, a genre devised by Truman Capote to describe his work of narrative nonfiction In Cold Blood.[1]
Serge Doubrovsky coined the term in 1977 with reference to his novel Fils.[2] However, autofiction arguably existed as a practice with ancient roots long before Doubrovsky coined the term. Michael Skafidas argues that the first-person narrative can be traced back to the confessional subtleties of Sappho's lyric "I."[3] Philippe Vilain distinguishes autofiction from autobiographical novels in that autofiction requires a first-person narrative by a protagonist who has the same name as the author.[4] Elizabeth Hardwick's novel Sleepless Nights and Chris Kraus's I Love Dick have been deemed early seminal works popularizing the form of autofiction.[citation needed]
Uses
In India, autofiction has been associated with the works of Hainsia Olindi and postmodern Tamil writer Charu Nivedita. His novel Zero Degree (1998), a groundbreaking work in Tamil literature, and his Marginal Man are examples of this genre.[5] In Urdu the fiction novels of Rahman Abbas are considered major work of autofiction, especially his two novels Nakhalistan Ki Talash (In Search of an Oasis) and Khuda Ke Saaye Mein Ankh Micholi (Hide and Seek in the Shadow of God). Japanese author Hitomi Kanehara wrote a novel titled Autofiction.[6][7]
In a 2018 article for New York magazine's website Vulture, literary critic Christian Lorentzen wrote, "The term autofiction has been in vogue for the past decade to describe a wave of very good American novels by the likes of Sheila Heti, Ben Lerner, Teju Cole, Jenny Offill, and Tao Lin, among others, as well as the multivolume epic My Struggle by the Norwegian Karl Ove Knausgaard." He elaborated:
The way the term is used tends to be unstable, which makes sense for a genre that blends fiction and what may appear to be fact into an unstable compound. In the past, I've tried to make a distinction in my own use of the term between autobiographical fiction, autobiographical metafiction, and autofiction, arguing that in autofiction there tends to be an emphasis on the narrator's or protagonist's or authorial alter ego's status as a writer or artist and that the book's creation is inscribed in the book itself.[8]
Notable authors
- Aldo Busi
- Amélie Nothomb
- Andrew Durbin
- Anne Wiazemsky
- Annie Ernaux
- Ayad Akhtar
- Ben Lerner
- Bret Easton Ellis
- Catherine Millet
- Charles Bukowski
- Charu Nivedita
- Chloe Delaume
- Chris Kraus
- Christine Angot
- Christopher Isherwood
- Curzio Malaparte
- Danielle Chelosky
- Doireann Ní Ghríofa
- Durga Chew-Bose
- Édouard Louis
- Eileen Myles
- Elizabeth Hardwick
- Emily Segal
- Emmanuel Carrère
- Emmelie Prophète
- Françoise Sagan
- Fritz Zorn
- Geoff Dyer
- Guillaume Dustan
- Henry Miller
- Hervé Guibert
- Hunter S. Thompson
- J. M. Coetzee
- Jack Kerouac
- James Baldwin
- James Joyce
- Jennifer Croft
- Karl Ove Knausgaard
- Lily Tuck
- Louis-Ferdinand Céline
- Marcel Proust
- Marguerite Duras
- Maria_Stepanova_(poet)
- Megan Boyle
- Michel Houellebecq
- Natasha Stagg
- Ocean Vuong
- Oksana Vasyakina
- Olivia Rosenthal
- Patricia Lockwood
- Patrick Modiano
- Philip Roth
- Rachel Cusk
- Sheila Heti
- Sherman Alexie
- Sven Hassel
- Tao Lin
- Teju Cole
- Vanessa Springora
- Vassilis Alexakis
- Vladimir Oravsky
- V.S. Naipaul
- W.G. Sebald
- William Keepers Maxwell Jr.
See also
References
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