Synopses & Reviews
For over two centuries Boswell's massive biography of Samuel Johnson has been both reverenced and reviled. Yet neither its admirers nor its critics have fully understood how the book was designed to work upon them. Boswell himself is partly to blame: throughout the Life he directs attention away from artistry to industry, from creative choices to dedicated researches. Yet his working manuscript, one of the twentieth century's greatest literary discoveries, tells a much different tale. Designing the Life of Johnson, the first study of its kind, reconstructs Boswell's models and methods by charting this textual labyrinth. It begins by analyzing the stages that led to the first edition, goes on to reveal the impact of portrait and theatre-piece upon the structure of the Life, and ends by uncovering the transformation of Johnson from savage into sage. The result is a more subtle, more vital assessment of Boswell the designer--and an enhanced awareness of biography's power to make life into art.
Review
"Redford is always in absolute control of his material: his readings and interpretations are perceptive and incisive, never strained or forced. The result is a wholly persuasive account of the 'textual labyrinth' out of which Boswell created his masterpiece.... [An] elegant and powerful book."--Times Literary Supplement
"A winning combination of scholarly strength and subtlety of insight which will make these gracefully written lectures a fitting companion to Redford's edition of the manuscript, and also the inescapable point of departure for anyone who wishes to understand how it was that Boswell designed The Life of Johnson."--Review of English Studies
"Redford made a careful study of Boswell's working manuscript in order to reveal just how carefully the biographer labored to produce his seemingly spontaneous and ingenuous work.... This book is accessible on almost every level and thus a fitting introduction to the world of Boswell scholarship. At the same time it is indispensable to those interested in the biographic genre, since Redford intends it as a comment on the nature of biography itself.... Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty."--Choice
"No one has made full use of the entire Boswellian archive: his complete working manuscript, notes, journals, letters, and proofs. This situation is happily rectified by Bruce Redford's Designing the Life of Johnson.... An invaluable and comprehensive overview of Boswell's biographical procedures and practices.... [This] is an impressive achievement. The availability of the entire working manuscript, and the author's skill in using this manuscript to describe Boswell's complex procedures, make the book the most useful overall study of the Life yet available."--Biography
"Embodies very high standards of scholarship and critical acumen.... Redford is able to bring intimate textual knowledge to bear on the subject.... Redford's study will enable scholars and critics to see this complex great work in its subtle particularities as never before.... This is a delicate, precise, yet bold and daring book."--Studies in English Literature 1500-1900
Synopsis
What makes a biographical masterpiece? By decoding the manuscript of Boswell's Life of Johnson, this innovative study reveals the methods and the models that shaped his monumental portrait. The result is a more subtle, more vital assessment of Boswell the designer--and an enhanced awareness of biography's power to make life into art.
About the Author
Bruce Redford is University Professor at Boston University.
Table of Contents
Cue Titles and Textual Note
Introduction
1. Imprinting Johnson
2. Representing Johnson
3. Dramatizing Johnson
4. Transmitting Johnson
5. Taming Johnson
Select Bibliography
Index