He was diffident about his achievements, in contrast to the self-aggrandisement common to autobiographers. |
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Ethical biographers and autobiographers work with veracity as their aim and this striving for veracity is respected, and expected, by readers. |
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This ode to education is also reminiscent of the glorification of American education by eighteenth-century male American autobiographers like Benjamin Franklin. |
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Like many autobiographers, her honesty leans towards self-indulgence in her refusal to attempt to give the reader anything more than a blandly introspective narrative. |
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This is the time of year when the must-have accessory for TV comedians seems to be a celebrity memoir: autumn 2013 autobiographers include Sir David Jason, Jennifer Saunders, Peter Kay and Jack Whitehall. |
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According to Yagoda, autobiographers in the 18th and 19th centuries routinely began with a preface to justify the seemingly egomaniacal enterprise. |
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Autobiographers who want to tell about themselves, without giving the whole show away, have discovered there is more than one way to approach it. |
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Autobiographers may use them to capture all that they see as they wander about each day, and the absent-minded may find them helpful in recalling where they left the car keys. |
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