Biofiction is literature that names its protagonist after an actual historical figure, and it has become a dominant literary form over the last 35 years. What has not yet been scholarly acknowledged or documented is that the Irish played a crucial role in the origins, evolution, rise, and now dominance of biofiction.
Michael Lackey first examines the groundbreaking biofictions that Oscar Wilde and George Moore authored in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as well as the best biographical novels about Wilde (by Peter Ackroyd and Colm Tóibín). He then focuses on contemporary authors of biofiction (Sabina Murray, Graham Shelby, Anne Enright, and Mario Vargas Llosa, who Lackey has interviewed for this work) who use the lives of prominent Irish figures (Roger Casement and Eliza Lynch) to explore the challenges of seizing and securing a life-promoting form of agency within a colonial and patriarchal context.
In conclusion, Lackey briefly analyzes biographical novels by Peter Carey and Mary Morrissy to illustrate why agency is of central importance for the Irish, and why that focus mandated the rise of the biographical novel, a literary form that mirrors the constructed Irish interior.
The voice in Ireland, the Irish, and the Rise of Biofiction is unusual in contemporary scholarship. It is urgent, patient, concerned to be plainly understood, and convinced of the importance of is message. Michael Lackey has pioneered the newly-named and currently-popular genre biofiction, novels about real people. He has traced its history and origins (Nietzsche, Oscar Wilde, and George Moore are key begetters), interviewed its contemporary practitioners, and spelled out its essential significance-that humans have agency, can achieve critical insights, and change their value systems, bringing into being new cultural frameworks in which to live. This book does some serious work.