The canonical Gospels are often classified as Greco-Roman bio. How the Gospels are classified goes to the question of their historicity. And that can go either way. If you classify them as historical by literary genre, then by definition they're historical. Or you might classify them as historical based on the contents and corroboration.
There are, however, many different kinds of biographical and autobiographical writing. To my knowledge, this is a severely neglected topic in Gospel criticism. This is my off-the-cuff taxonomy. There may be other examples I've overlooked since I haven't done in-depth research on the issue. My immediate purpose isn't to peg the Gospels according to this taxonomy, but to briefly explore how Gospel criticism typically oversimplifies the range of genre.
1. Critical biography
An academic tome intended to be excruciatingly exhaustive. Usually about a public figure. Documents every detail as equally important. Nothing too trivial to escape notice. A reference work for fellow historians or diehard fans.
2. Official propaganga
Stuff churned out by court historians to embellish the image of the glorious leader.
3. Hagiography
An image-conscious autobiography designed to control how he will be remembered by posterity. A crafted reputation.
4. Hatchet-job
An anti-hagiography. Tries to debunk someone's reputation. Dig up dirt. Peddle rumor, gossip, and innuendo. A. N. Wilson's biography of C. S. Lewis is a case in point.
5. Nice guys finish last
In the entertainment industry, polishing your bad boy/bad girl credentials is a career booster. The star goes out of their way to be be sensational and scandalous.
6. Exposé
Designed to settle old scores with political enemies or professional rivals.
7. Apologetic
Defending one's reputation and the pristine purity of one's motives. Examples include Josephus and Newman's Apologia.
8. The Wit and Wisdom
A subdivision of hagiography, with catchy quips and one-liners
8. Confessional
Often documents the before and after of a dramatic conversion experience. Classic examples include Augustine and Bunyan.
However, it can also be by infidels who aspire to authenticity and transparency (e.g. Sartre).
9. Underdog
Heroic tale of somebody who overcomes adversity. Booker T. Washington is a classic example.
10. Witness
The testament of an eyewitness to institutional evil. Examples include Elie Wiesel and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
11. Self-promotional propaganda
Mein Kampf
12. Memoir
A selective autobiography. Not selective based on some agenda, but simply what the writer finds personally significant. Defining incidents in his life. Not so much about himself, but using his experience and observation to comment on the world. Heavy on interpretation. The reader views a particular time and place through the eyes of the autobiographer. An extreme example is Proust.
13. Diaries
In cases where the diarist is famous, he may write self-consciously in anticipation that his "private" diaries will someday come to light–in which case the diary may be less forthcoming. If the diarist is not a public figure, the entries are more likely to be candid, unguarded, and revealing.
14. Intellectual autobiography
Typically in a festschrift for a philosopher, with a focus on his intellectual development. Thinkers who influenced his outlook. Sparring partners.
15. Travelogue
By explorers who travel the world or discover the world. Their life is defined where they've been. The places make their lives interesting to read about.
16. Pioneers
By desperate or adventurous people who settle an area, then write about their risky, arduous experience bringing civilization to the wilderness.
17. War journals
Some folks live in exciting, harrowing, hazardous times. The circumstances make their lives gripping to read about.
18. Autobiographical fiction
Mark Twain, Larry McMurtry, Giorgio Bassani, Thomas Hughes (Tom Brown's School Days).
These days we might add the blog or vblog. Something like a publicly conscious journal or diary, I guess. More immediate.
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