Sidonie Smith is the Lorna G. Goodison Distinguished University Professor of English and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan. She is a past-President of the Modern Language Association of America (2010). That experience led her to write Manifesto for the Humanities: Transforming Doctoral Education in Good Enough Times (2015). She is author of Where I'm Bound: Patterns of Slavery and Freedom in Black American Autobiography (1974), A Poetics of Women's Autobiography (1987) Subjectivity, Identity, and the Body (1993), and Moving Lives: Women's Twentieth Century Travel Narratives (2001), as well as numerous essays. With Kay Schaffer, she co-authored Human Rights and Narrated Lives (2004). With Julia Watson, she co-authored Reading Autobiography: A Guide for Interpreting Life Narratives (2001; expanded edition 2010); and co-edited one anthology and four volumes of critical essays, among them De/Colonizing the Subject: Gender and the Politics of Women's Autobiography (1992) and Getting a Life: Everyday Uses of Autobiography (1996), and Inter/Faces: Women, Autobiography, Image, Performance (2002). Her latest book, with Julia Watson, is Life Writing in the Long Run: A Smith & Watson Autobiography Studies Reader (2017). This book is available in ebook, print-on-demand and online open access formats.
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