Women''s Diaries from the Civil War South: A Literary-Historical Reading
English
By (author): Sharon Talley
Traditionally, narratives of war have been male, Sharon Talley writes. In the pages that follow, she goes on to disrupt this tradition, offering close readings and comparative studies of fourteen womens diaries from the Civil War era that illuminate womens experiences in the Confederacy during the war.
While other works highlighting individual diaries existand Talley notes that there has been a virtual explosion of published primary sources by women in recent yearsthis is the first effort of comprehensive synthesis of womens Civil War diaries to attempt to characterize them as a distinct genre. Deeply informed by autobiographical theory, as well as literary and social history, Talleys presentation of multiple diaries from women of differing backgrounds illuminates complexities and disparities across female wartime experiences rather than perpetuating overgeneralizations gleaned from a single diary or
preconceived ideas about what these diaries contain.
To facilitate this comparative approach, Talley divides her study into six sections that are organized by location, vocation, and purpose: diaries of elite planter women; diaries of women on the Texas frontier; diaries of women on the Confederate border; diaries of espionage by women in the South; diaries of women nurses near the battlefront; and diaries of women missionaries in the Port Royal Experiment. When read together, these writings illustrate that the female experience in the Civil War South was not one but many.
Womens Diaries from the Civil War South: A Literary-Historical Reading is an essential text for scholars in womens studies, autobiography studies, and Civil War studies alike, presenting an in-depth and multifaceted look at how the Civil War reshaped womens lives in the Southand how their diverse responses shaped the course of the war in return.
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