Tirohanga noa Tirohanga MARC

Tāurunga Genre/Form Term

Maha o ngā pūkete i whakamahia i: 39

001 - CONTROL NUMBER

  • control field: 230912

003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER

  • control field: NZHWP

005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION

  • control field: 20190222163600.0

008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS

  • fixed length control field: 141201|| anznnbabn |a ana c

010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER

  • LC control number: gf2014026231

035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER

  • System control number: gf2014026231

040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE

  • Original cataloging agency: IlChALCS
  • Language of cataloging: eng
  • Transcribing agency: DLC
  • Subject heading or thesaurus conventions: lcgft
  • Modifying agency: DLC

155 #0 - HEADING--GENRE/FORM TERM

  • Genre/form term: Autobiographical fiction.

455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM

  • Genre/form term: Autobiographic fiction

455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM

  • Genre/form term: Autofiction

455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM

  • Genre/form term: Semi-autobiographical fiction

455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM

  • Genre/form term: Semiautobiographical fiction

555 #0 - SEE ALSO FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM

  • Control subfield: g
  • Genre/form term: Biographical fiction.

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Wheeler, K. Literary terms and definitions, via WWW, April 17, 2013
  • Information found: (Autobiographical novel: In contrast with the pure autobiography, an autobiographical novel is a semi-fictional narrative based in part on the author's life experience, but these experiences are often transposed onto a fictional character or intermixed with fictional events. Examples include Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel and James Joyce's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Baldick, C. Oxford dictionary of literary terms, c2008
  • Information found: (autobiographical novel (often qualified as "semi-autobiographical" refers to a kind of novel, of a "Bildungsroman", in which the events, settings, and characters are based upon the author's own life.)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: GSAFD, 2000
  • Information found: (Autobiographical fiction: Use for works in which the events in the writer's life slightly disguised are presented as fiction. Samuel Butler's The way of all flesh is an example of autobiographical fiction. UF Fiction, Autobiographical)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Encyclopedia of the novel, 1998:
  • Information found: v.1 (Autobiographical novel: it is impossible to draw a clear line between autobiographical and nonautobiographical fiction. How much of the author's life should be present in a novel to qualify it as autobiographical? This essay will take a highly pragmatic approach to the term, applying it to novels that exhibit a significant and generally uncontested autobiographical presence.The distinction between autobiographical fiction and fictional autobiography is more straightforward. An autobiographical novel follows novelistic conventions but contains some material taken from the author's life. A fictional autobiography, such as Daniel Defoe's Moll Flanders (1722), is entirely fictional but observes the conventions of autobiography in its account of the life of the narrator)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Encyclopedia of life-writing, 2001
  • Information found: (The I-novel: "I-novel" is an inexact translation from the Japanese of shish�osetsu (alternately read watakushi sh�osetsu). Shish�osetsu, which can be translated more accurately as self-writing, denotes prose fiction of variable length believed to reflect authentically the private life of the author)

670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND

  • Source citation: Routledge encyclopedia of narrative theory, 2005
  • Information found: (Autofiction: Autofiction is a homodiegetic narrative that declares itself to be fiction - by being called 'novel' on the front page, for example - but actually relates events of the author's own life and identifies the author in the text by his or her real name)

680 ## - PUBLIC GENERAL NOTE

  • Explanatory text: Fiction that is based on events in the author's life but employs fictional characters intermixed with fictional events. For works that present themselves as autobiographies but whose narrators and events are fictional see
  • Heading or subdivision term: Fictional autobiographies.

681 ## - SUBJECT EXAMPLE TRACING NOTE

  • Explanatory text: Note under
  • Subject heading or subdivision term: Fictional autobiographies

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