Dictionary Definition
memoir
Noun
1 an account of the author's personal
experiences
2 an essay on a scientific or scholarly
topic
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- (US) /ˈmɛmˌwɑr/
Noun
- an autobiography, a book
describing the personal
experiences of an author.
- When I retire, I'm going to write my memoirs.
- Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer.
Translations
- Finnish: muistelmateos
Usage notes
- A memoir differs from a simple autobiography by not focusing on the author as the primary subject matter, but on people and events in the author's life. Emphasis is placed on personal observations about external events.
- The plural memoirs is very often used to refer to a single work.
Extensive Definition
- for other uses, see Memoir (disambiguation)
As a literary genre, a memoir (from the French:
mémoire from the Latin memoria,
meaning "memory"), or a reminiscence, forms a subclass of autobiography – although
the terms 'memoir' and 'autobiography' are today almost
interchangeable.
Nature of memoirs
Memoirs may appear less structured and less encompassing than formal autobiographical works as they are usually about part of a life rather than the chronological telling of a life from childhood to adulthood/old age. Traditionally, memoirs usually dealt with public matters, rather than personal, and many older memoirs contain little or no information about the writer, and are almost entirely concerned with other people. They tended to be written by politicians or people in court society, later joined by military leaders and businessmen, and often dealt exclusively with the writer's careers rather than their private life. Modern expectations have changed this, even for heads of government. Like most autobiographies, memoirs are generally written from the first person point of view.Gore Vidal, in
his own memoir Palimpsest, gave
a personal definition: "a memoir is how one remembers one's own
life, while an autobiography is history, requiring research, dates,
facts double-checked." It is more about what can be gleaned from a
section of one's life than about the outcome of the life as a
whole.
The author of a memoir may be referred to as a
memoirist. Contemporary practices of writing memoirs for
recreational, family or therapeutic purposes are sometimes referred
to as legacy writing or personal history. These are sometimes
written with the help of a professional "personal historian."
Types of memoir
Memoirs have often been written by politicians or military leaders as a way to record and publish an account of their public exploits. In the eighteenth century, "scandalous memoirs", allegedly factual but largley invented, were written (mostly anonymously) by prostitutes or libertines: these were widely read in France for their vulgar details and gossip. In another vein, the pagan rhetor Libanius framed his life memoir as one of his orations, not the public kind, but the literary kind that would be read aloud in the privacy of one's study. This kind of memoir refers to the idea in ancient Greece and Rome, that memoirs were like "memos," pieces of unfinished and unpublished writing which a writer might use as a memory aid to make a more finished document later on.Women writers have been prominent amongst those
combining the memoir form with historical non-fiction writing.
Examples include Helen Epstein's Czech-based Where She Came From: A
Daughter's Search for her Mother's History and Jung Chang's
Wild
Swans. Maxine
Hong Kingston's book The Woman
Warrior is an example of a memoir that combines factual
material with fictional material as it tells the author's story and
the story of her family.
Some professional contemporary writers such as
David
Sedaris and Augusten
Burroughs have specialised in writing amusing essays in the
form of memoirs. To some extent this is an extension of the
tradition of newspaper columnists' regular accounts
of their lives. (Cf. the work of James
Thurber which often has a strong memoir-like content).
Another category of memoir is the eyewitness
account of history by onlookers to major events or particular eras;
Slave narratives fall into this category as do those by Primo Levi,
Heda Kovaly, and Elie
Wiesel.
memoir in Bulgarian: Мемоари
memoir in Czech: Paměti
memoir in German: Memoiren
memoir in Modern Greek (1453-):
Απομνημονεύματα
memoir in Spanish: Memorias
memoir in French: Mémoires
memoir in Hebrew: יומן זיכרונות
memoir in Polish: Pamiętnik
memoir in Portuguese: Memórias
memoir in Swedish: Memoarer
memoir in Turkish: Anı
memoir in Chinese: 回忆录
memoir in Russian: Мемуары
memoir in Vietnamese: Hồi ký
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Clio,
Muse of history, account, accounts, adventures, adversaria, aide-memoire,
anecdote, annals, annotation, article, autobiography,
biographical sketch, biography, case history,
causerie, chronicle, chronicles, chronology, commitment to
memory, confessions,
curriculum vitae, descant, diary, discourse, discussion, disquisition, dissertation, docket, entry, essay, etude, examination, excursus, exercise of memory,
experiences,
exposition, feature, first approach,
flashback, footnote, fortunes, hagiography, hagiology, hindsight, historiography, history, homily, introductory study,
item, jotting, journal, learning by heart,
legend, letters, life, life and letters, life story,
looking back, lucubration, marginal note,
marginalia, martyrology, memo, memoirs, memorabilia, memorandum, memorial, memorials, memories, memorization, memorizing, memory, minutes, monograph, morceau, narrative, necrology, notation, note, obituary, outline, pandect, paper, paragraph, photobiography, piece, preliminary study, profile, prolegomenon, recall, recalling, recollecting, recollection, reconsideration,
record, records, reflection, register, registry, remembering, remembrance, reminder, reminiscence, report, reportage, research paper,
resume, retrospect, retrospection, review, rote, rote memory, scholia, scholium, screed, sketch, special article, story, study, survey, term paper, theme, theory of history, thesis, tract, tractate, treatise, treatment