3. Miller, Getting Personal, 121.
4. Ibid., 20.
5. Henderson, “Introduction,” 13.
6. Harbord, “Platitudes,” 24.
7. Miller, Getting Personal, xii.
8. Cavarero, Relating Narratives, 76.
9. Miller, Getting Personal, 1.
10. Brock and Parker, Proverbs of Ashes, 6.
11. McCallum, “Anonymity Desirable,” 51.
12. Ibid.
13. Ibid.
14. Althaus-Reid, Indecent Theology; Queer God; From Feminist Theology to Indecent Theology.
15. Althaus-Reid, Queer God, 10.
16. Pattison, “Suffer Little Children”; Shame.
17. Kitzberger, Personal Voice in Biblical Interpretation; Autobiographical Biblical Criticism.
18. Slee, Praying Like a Woman.
19. Gilbert, “Life Studies,” 853.
20. Kennard, “Personally Speaking,” 141.
21. Probyn, Sexing the Self, 13.
22. Kennard, “Personally Speaking,” 143.
23. Tompkins, “Me and My Shadow,” 169.
24. Ibid.
25. Ibid., 173.
26. Miller, Getting Personal, 23.
27. Ibid., 25.
28. Ibid., xi.
29. Ibid., 23.
30. Probyn, “This Body Which is Not One,” 113.
31. Tompkins, “Me and My Shadow,” 173.
32. Veeser, “Case for Confessional Criticism,” x.
33. Probyn, Sexing the Self, 84.
34. Ibid., 4.
35. Ibid., 20.
36. Ibid., 4.
37. See, for example, Fulkerson, Changing the Subject; Graham, Making the Difference; Jantzen, Becoming Divine; Thistlethwaite, Sex, Race and God; West, Deadly Innocence.
38. Christ and Plaskow, Weaving the Visions, 3.
39. Probyn, “This Body Which is Not One,” 113.
40. Smith, Poetics of Women’s Autobiography, 45.
41. See Cavarero, Relating Narratives; Smith, Poetics of Women’s Autobiography; Stanley, Auto/Biographical I.
42. Smith, Poetics of Women’s Autobiography, 5.
43. Smith, “Performativity,” 108.
44. Ricoeur, Ricoeur Reader, 436.
45. Ibid., 435.
46. Kearney, On Stories, 14.
47. Cavarero, Relating Narratives, 18.
48. Ibid., 32.
49. Kearney, On Stories, 152.
50. Ibid., 4.
51. Brodzki and Schenck, Life/Lines, 1.
52. Rudy, “Subjectivity and Belief,” 40.
53. Rudy, “Subjectivity and Belief,” 42-3.
54. Veeser, “Case for Confessional Criticism,” xiii.
55. Smith, Poetics of Women’s