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(1998) Writing the lives of writers, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Life-writing without letters

fielding and the problem of evidence

Martin C. Battestin

pp. 90-106

Our postmodernist contemporaries give too little credit to the wisdom of the past. Before Hayden White, Fielding knew that historians were the real romance-writers, that Cervantes, not Mariana, had written the true history of his countrymen — and indeed not of his countrymen only, but of "the World in general".1 And Richard Rorty's notion that truth is indistinguishable from fiction is no more radical than that of the pious biographer Agnellus, who a thousand years ago, when he could find no facts about his subjects, wrote resolutely on, explaining — in words I took for a motto to the biography of Fielding: "I invented lives for them, and I do not believe them to be false."2

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-26548-0_7

Full citation:

Battestin, M. C. (1998)., Life-writing without letters: fielding and the problem of evidence, in W. Gould & T. F. Staley (eds.), Writing the lives of writers, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 90-106.

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