The noun 'autobiography' was coined in English in the late eighteenth century from three Greek elements: 'autos' (self), 'bios' (life), and 'graphein' (to write, to draw, to scratch). The compound is transparent: self-life-writing. The word was probably first used by William Taylor of Norwich in a review published in 1797 in 'The Monthly Review,' where he wrote of a work exhibiting 'the autobiography of a Dissenting minister.' Robert Southey used the term independently in 1809, and it became standard English vocabulary within a generation.
Before 'autobiography' existed as a word, the practice it describes had a long history. Saint Augustine's 'Confessions' (c. 397-400 CE) is the earliest major autobiography in the Western tradition — a narrative of the author's spiritual journey from sinful youth through intellectual wandering to Christian conversion. Augustine addressed the entire work to God, framing self-narrative as prayer and confession. This theological framing established
Medieval autobiography was typically embedded in other forms: saints' lives, monastic chronicles, mystical writings. Margery Kempe's 'Book' (c. 1436), dictated by the illiterate English mystic, is sometimes called the first autobiography in English, though it was not published until 1936. Benvenuto Cellini's 'Vita' (begun 1558) brought autobiography into the secular domain — a goldsmith and sculptor narrating his adventures, feuds, and artistic triumphs with no pretense of spiritual purpose.
The Enlightenment created the conditions for autobiography's flourishing as a literary form. Jean-Jacques Rousseau's 'Confessions' (published posthumously, 1782-1789) — deliberately titled to evoke and challenge Augustine — promised radical honesty about the author's inner life, including embarrassing and shameful episodes. Rousseau's opening declaration — 'I am made unlike any one I have ever met; I dare say I am like no one in the whole world' — established the modern autobiographical premise: the self is unique, interesting, and worthy of detailed examination.
Benjamin Franklin's 'Autobiography' (begun 1771, published in full 1818) offered a different model: the self-made man narrating his rise from poverty to prominence as an exemplar and guide for others. Franklin's autobiography is pragmatic where Rousseau's is confessional — it teaches rather than reveals. The two models — confession and instruction — have shaped autobiography ever since, and most autobiographies fall somewhere on the spectrum between them.
The nineteenth century saw the emergence of slave narratives as a distinctive autobiographical form. Frederick Douglass's 'Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave' (1845) and Harriet Jacobs's 'Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl' (1861) used autobiography as a political weapon, bearing witness to the horrors of slavery and asserting the full humanity of enslaved people. These narratives were simultaneously personal testimonies and political arguments — autobiography in the service of liberation.
The twentieth century brought the problem of autobiographical truth into sharp focus. Can anyone write their own life honestly? Memory is selective, self-serving, and unreliable. The autobiographer is simultaneously the subject, the narrator, and the editor — three roles with conflicting interests
The prefix 'auto-' (self), from Greek 'autos,' is productive in English: 'autograph' (self-written), 'automobile' (self-moving), 'autonomous' (self-governing), 'automatic' (self-acting), 'autopsy' (self-seeing — seeing for oneself). The root 'graphein' (to write) generates 'biography' (life-writing), 'geography' (earth-writing), 'telegraph' (far-writing), 'photograph' (light-writing), and 'calligraphy' (beautiful writing). 'Autobiography' sits at the intersection of these two families, naming the act of writing oneself — of making the self legible through narrative.
The distinction between autobiography and memoir is often debated. Strictly, an autobiography attempts to narrate an entire life from beginning to the time of writing, while a memoir focuses on a particular period, theme, or experience. In practice, the boundary is porous: many works called autobiographies are selective, and many works called memoirs span entire lives. The two words