The Value of Telling Your Own Story
Even if no one else every reads them, there's value in recording our own histories.
In one of those zeitgeist ripples, BBC Radio 4 was completing the second series of its programme My Teenage Diary when the Morgan Library and Museum opened its exhibition, The Diary: Three Centuries of Private Life. While we tend to focus on the journal writing of famous people—hoping they unveil juicy secrets or heretofore unknown connections between the public and private spheres—the fact is diary writing remains a great resource for anyone. Inappropriate thoughts, fears, fantasies, hopes, goals can all fill the pages of the diary without repercussion. It's like a best friend but without the dubious advice and possibility of gossip.
As the curator for the Morgan writes,
For centuries, people have turned to private journals to document their days, sort out creative problems, help them through crises, comfort them in solitude or pain, or preserve their stories for the future. As more and more diarists turn away from the traditional notebook and seek a broader audience through web journals, blogs, and social media, this exhibition explores how and why we document our everyday lives.
The advantage of being able to manage the divide between public and private in our revelations has only increased the use of online blogs and journals. The tension between the privacy locks you can put on your LiveJournal and the brash confidence of letting your thinking evolve aloud in the public forum of a blog has changed many of the ways we divide public and private space...
Read the rest: http://culture.bitchbuzz.com/the-value-of-telling-your-own-story.html#ixzz1EtHm3gtk
4 comments:
It is remarkable how we have to work for our vacations...may all be smooth (or lubricated) as we lead up to your decampment to the land of some of my foreparents...
LOL -- I will take that in the spirit it is surely meant. I have no ancestral ties there but so much art that draws me on and even more so, friends!
Have a great time. I have been to Italy but not Rome. Loved Florence, Venice and Tuscanny. But what's the saying--you have to go to Rome before you die.
A long as I don't die right after -- I have a lot to do yet :-)
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