176 Book ReviewAutonomy, Beneficence and Justice in Life WritingVulnerable subjects, ethics and life writing. G. Thomas Couser, 2004. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press; ISBN 08148863X, 256 pp., £10.95 paper SAGE Publications, Inc.2005DOI: 10.1177/09675507050130020502 TerryMartin University of Southampton The vulnerable subjects, who are the focus of this work, are vulnerable to harm through the writings of others. Their vulnerability to misrepre- sentation often arises through specific internal impairments that render them unaware of how they are being represented and incapable of either consent or protest. An example of such a vulnerable subject would be the novelist Iris Murdoch, and the portrayal of her in the books (and film) by her husband John Bayley. Other subjects may be vulnerable through external circumstance or situation, and the ethical issue centres on betrayal of trust. The underlying 177 issues invariably concern competing values and interests. At the heart of many ethical dilemmas are the competing values of truth and respect. The author is at pains to point out that he has no agenda to `police' life writing in order to ensure protection and respect for vulnerable subjects. Nevertheless his argument leads to a more balanced position, where the interests of such subjects need to be considered more carefully and to influence subsequent decisions about what to exclude and what to include in published texts. Although, in his own words, this is not a book about bioethics, the author draws upon key concepts of this contemporary approach, such as the principles of autonomy, beneficence and justice. By careful analysis of a range of different examples, he demonstrates the complexity of the issues at stake, and how these principles might come into conflict. The wide range of his examples is drawn mainly from North America, but the author provides detailed contextual information so that a reader unfa- miliar with them can appreciate the ethical issues at stake. The unusual and atypical nature of his examples might suggest that the ethical issues are themselves atypical. On the contrary, the issues are pervasive and insofar as vulnerability is considered a matter of degree rather than kind, then for that reason alone the book is to be thoroughly commended as an essential text in any consideration of ethics and life writing. I found this to be a challenging book in two senses. First, it makes intel- lectual demands upon the reader, and secondly it challenges practice. Although never strident, the author makes his case persuasively and insis- tently, and the integrity he displays commands respect. He has, in a sense, made himself vulnerable in making his own text public.