Introduction
The Two Sides of a Life
When we learn about a person's life, we often rely on two distinct perspectives: the biography, written by an external observer, and the autobiography, written by the subject themselves. Do these narratives always align? How does personal memory differ from historical fact-finding?
In this WebQuest, you will become a narrative detective, choosing a historical or public figure who has both a major biography and a published autobiography. Your mission is to analyze these two accounts, uncover where they agree and disagree, and determine how perspective shapes the story of a single life.
Task
The Comparative Report
Your final product will be a Digital Comparative Report (e.g., a presentation, a video essay, or a detailed infographic) that addresses the following:
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The Core Comparison: Identify at least three major life events and show how each event is presented differently in the biography versus the autobiography.
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The Biographer's Purpose: Analyze the biographer's primary purpose, target audience, and overall tone.
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The Autobiographer's Purpose: Analyze the autobiographer's primary purpose (e.g., self-justification, reflection, legacy building), target audience, and overall tone.
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The Synthesis: Conclude by arguing which narrative you find more truthful or insightful and why.
Process
Phase 1: Selection and Resources (Biography & Autobiography)
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Step |
Action |
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1. Choose Your Subject |
Select a public figure with both a well-known biography and a major autobiography (e.g., Nelson Mandela, Malala Yousafzai, Benjamin Franklin, Michelle Obama). |
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2. Define Your Sources |
Find an online summary, review, or primary source information for the chosen biography and autobiography. Record the full title and author of both books. |
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3. Establish Context |
Find three reliable, objective sources (news articles, academic summaries) that cover the subject's major life events. These serve as your baseline "objective facts." |
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Phase 2: Analysis of the Biography (External Viewpoint)
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Step |
Action |
Key Questions to Answer |
|---|---|---|
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4. The Biographer's Lens |
Investigate the biographer. What is their background? What sources did they use (interviews, letters, public records)? |
Is the biographer sympathetic or critical of the subject? How do they handle controversial moments? |
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5. External Focus |
Read or skim sections of the biography focusing on the three major life events you chose in the Task. |
What did the biographer focus on? Did they discuss the subject's inner thoughts, or mainly their actions and impact on others? |
Phase 3: Analysis of the Autobiography (Internal Viewpoint)
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Step |
Action |
Key Questions to Answer |
|---|---|---|
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6. The Subject's Memory |
Investigate the subject's stated reasons for writing their autobiography. When in their life did they write it? (Timing is crucial!) |
What self-image is the author trying to project? What parts of their life did they choose not to include? |
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7. Internal Focus |
Read or skim the corresponding sections of the autobiography focusing on the same three major life events. |
How does the author explain their own motivations? Do they admit to mistakes? What emotions do they emphasize? |
Phase 4: Synthesis and Creation
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Step |
Action |
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8. Compare and Contrast |
Create a Venn diagram or comparison table outlining the common points and the distinct differences in narrative, tone, and emphasis for the three major life events. |
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9. Draw Conclusions |
Formulate your final argument about the influence of perspective on truth. |
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10. Build Report |
Organize your findings into the final Digital Comparative Report format, ensuring visual clarity and detailed analysis. |
Evaluation
Grading Rubric
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Criteria |
Proficient (4 Points) |
Developing (2 Points) |
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Source Analysis |
Clearly identifies the purpose and background of both authors; insightful analysis of tone and audience. |
Identifies authors but provides only surface-level description of tone or purpose. |
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Core Comparison |
Accurately contrasts all three major life events; differences in interpretation are explained in detail. |
Compares events, but the analysis of narrative difference is vague or incomplete. |
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Synthesis & Argument |
Presents a clear, well-supported, and compelling argument for which narrative is more insightful, citing specific evidence. |
Presents an argument, but it is weakly supported or relies on general statements. |
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Presentation Quality |
Report is professional, visually engaging, logically structured, and free of errors. |
Report is functional but lacks professional formatting, clarity, or organization. |
Conclusion
You have successfully explored the complex relationship between history and memory. Understanding the difference between a biographer's research and an autobiographer's self-reflection is a critical skill for evaluating all historical and literary sources. Congratulations on completing your investigation into the power of perspective!