The Private Life of the Diary: From Pepys to Tweets A History of the Diary as an Art Form
By (Author) Sally Bayley
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
6th July 2021
18th March 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Autobiography: writers
Historiography
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
809.983
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 20mm
220g
In a beautiful literary exploration, Sally Bayley tracks the evolution and the potential twenty first century death of the diary, mourning what it means to lose the art of writing simply for oneself.
Diaries hold all manner of things: they allow us a moment to be completely personal, to self-aggrandise, to focus on self-reflection without concern of what someone on the outside might think. Discovered or published diaries of the past have also provided glimpses into history, eras and minds gone by, especially the inner lives otherwise unknown.
Tracing the history of the diary from Samuel Pepys, whose record of the Great Plague and Great Fire of London informed history, through the likes of Virginia Woolfs personal confessions in the twentieth century, and up to the age of social media, Sally Bayley explores the beauty and the power of recording ones own life.
Taking this thought all the way up to our era of exposure, with confessional journalism and social media barrage, Bayley explores what we might lose as individuals if we let go of the diary as private confidante, choosing instead a culture of public disclosure.
A masterly study on the 'long historical habit' of diary writing Bayley's book succeeds brilliantly in merging scholarship with imagination, and emotional depth with writerly flair
Independent
An elegant survey of diaries through history and why we keep them Bayley is splendidly dismissive of blogs sending boring screeds into "a blank universe" and when she defined tweeting as "a sort of premature mental ejaculation" I wrote in the margin in Sylvia Plath-size letters with a Magic Marker: Brava, Sally!
Roger Lewis, The Times
A delight for fans of Sylvia Plath as well as diary writers everywhere
Woman's Way Ireland
Sally Bayley is a Teaching and Research Fellow at the Rothermere American Institute at the University of Oxford and from September 2018 she will be teaching writing in Oxford as a Royal Literary Fund Fellow. Sally has written widely on visual responses to literature, including a jointly authored study of Sylvia Plath's relationship to the visual arts: Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath's Art of the Visual and a study of Plath as a cultural icon: Representing Sylvia Plath. In 2010 she completed a cross-media study of Emily Dickinson as a way of thinking about America's relationship to space and place: Home on the Horizon: America's Search for Space, from Emily Dickinson to Bob Dylan. She is the author of The Private Life of the Diary (Unbound, 2016).