Confessional writing
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In literature, confessional writing is a first-person style that is often presented as an ongoing diary or letters, distinguished by revelations of a person's heart and darker motiviations.
Originally, the term derived from confession: the writer is not only autobiographically recounting his life, but confessing to his sins. Among the earliest examples is St Augustine's Confessions, perhaps the first autobiography of Western Europe. In it, he not only recounted the events of his life, he wrestled with their meaning and significiance, as in a passage where he tried to fathom why he had stole pears with friends, not to eat but to throw away.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau turned it to a more secular purpose in his Confessions.
From this meaning evolved the meaning of writing that reveals more of the writer's heart and motivations, particularly the darker reactions, and the events that are normally kept secret.
Fictionally, the confessional story is a story written, in the first person, about emotionally fraught and morally charged situations in which a fictional character is caught. These stories may be anything from thinly veiled recountings of the writer's life, to completely fictional works.
With the advent of the magazine True Story in 1919 and the imitations of it, the confessional (or romance) magazine was created, containing such stories.[1] Such confessions magazines were chiefly aimed at an audience of working class women.[2] Their formula has been characterized as "sin-suffer-repent": the heroine violates standards of behavior, suffers as a consequences, learns her lesson and resolves to live in light of it, unembittered by her pain.[3]
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- ^ Linda M. Scott, Fresh Lipstick: Redressing Fashion and Feminism p 158 ISBN 1-4039-6686-9
- ^ Maureen Honey, Creating Rosie the Riveter: Class, Gender and Propoganda during World War II, p 139, ISBN 0-87023-453-6
- ^ Maureen Honey, Creating Rosie the Riveter: Class, Gender and Propoganda during World War II, p 141-43, ISBN 0-87023-453-6