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3/2/2016 0 Comments

The process

Okay, I have done a section entitled, 'My Vehicles.'  I'm quite pleased with it. I'm not posting it though, it'll be in my book.
On the whole, I'm quite pleased with how my autobiography is progressing. It is remarkable how memories are triggered, and how one memory leads to another quite disconnected in time and place. I'm confident I can write a book: on me, yeah. Although, I think I need to throw in a few landmarks: song titles, tv programmes and events. e.g. Something Better Change, Watch With Mother, The Miner's Strike.
Yeah, it's looking pretty good, and I've not even touched on the interesting bits . Words like 'discrimination', marginalisation', and 'alienation' haven't yet entered my vocabulary. But, in the (not so) great working-class tradition, they will.  
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    I recently completed an academic research project (MPhil) about working-class women’s autobiographies. Now I’m writing my own...

    To cut a long story short:

    My dad and both my grandads were coal miners. I was born in Coalville. I belong on this website. 
    I returned to education as a mature student: got a couple of A-levels, went to university; got a BA, an MA, a PhD, and an MPhil. It was not as easy as that. It was not as quick as that. But I did.
    I have spent most of my adult-life studying something. Generally something to do with English literature: mainly something to do with working-class women. My MA is about Women and God – inspired by and emotively written through my experiences as a pupil at Catholic primary and secondary schools. My PhD and MPhil projects are about working-class women writers – inspired and emotively written through my experiences as a working-class woman in a materialistic and class-ridden society. When I was an undergraduate at university, there wasn’t a module about working-class writing. There just wasn't. I didn’t study any working-class texts. I just didn’t. I once gave a research paper about my PhD (ie: talking about my work) and I remember someone laughingly said, ‘Was there a recession in the 1980s? I must have missed that.’ That just about sums it up.
    I have had no working-class peers. I found them in my reading and writing. In my reading and writing I found myself.

    Welcome to my blog.
    It's basically about me.It’s called ‘My Travel Blog’ (because I’m time travelling through my memories of the past). See what I did there?


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