Find out more about how The Lecture List works.
Coronavirus situation updateOur lecture organisers may or may not have had time to update their events with cancellation notices. Clearly social gatherings are to be avoided and that includes lectures. STAY AT HOME FOLKS, PLEASE. |
Find out what you can do to keep The Lecture List online
|
Biographies are getting bigger and bigger, but are they getting better? Are we in danger of losing the old biographical faith that lives have a meaningful shape of their own rather than being mere successions of events? And can the act of writing still be a gesture of mourning? The writer Gabriel Josipovici will explore these issues with reference to A Life, his recent biography of his mother.
Gabriel Josipovici is a novelist, playwright, essayist, literary critic and historian, who taught for many years at the University of Sussex.
A series of lectures exploring the uses of biography
in the Conference Centre
What is the connection between living a life and recounting it? It has been argued that human existence itself is woven out of the stories we tell ourselves about our lives - but are stories the best ways of understanding human lives? What happens when philosophical analyses of existence and identity meet up with biographical narratives?
This lecture series presents a cast of philosophers, theorists and biographers who will take the opportunity to reflect on how far we can understand our lives in terms of life-stories.
Speaker(s): |
Gabriel Josipovici | talks |
|
|
Date and Time: |
21 June 2004 at 6:30 pm |
Duration: | 1 hour 30 minutes |
|
|
Venue: |
The British Library |
|
|
Tickets: |
£5 (concessions £2.50) |
Available from: |
By post By phone By email In person You can pay by |
Additional Information: |
While it is sometimes possible to obtain tickets on the night we do advise you to obtain them in advance, as events often sell out quickly. Concessions are available for 18 years and under, senior citizens, full-time students, unwaged (ES40), Camden Leisure Cardholders and Friends of the British Library. Seats on the front row or by the central aisle can be reserved for patrons with disabilities, subject to availability. Please note |
Register to tell a friend about this lecture.
If you would like to comment about this lecture, please register here.
Any ad revenue is entirely reinvested into the Lecture List's operating fund