Mary Chesnut's Civil War

Main Author: Chesnut, Mary Boykin Miller, 1823-1886.
Other Authors: Woodward, C. Vann 1908-
Format: Books Print Book
Language: English
Published: New Haven : Yale University Press, c1981.
Subjects:
Item Description: Selections from this work were previously published under title: A diary from Dixie.
Physical Description: lviii, 886 p., [5] leaves of plates : ill. ; 24 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN: 0300024592 :
Author Notes: Mary Chesnut was a Southern-aristocrat daughter of the governor of South Carolina and the wife of a U.S. senator who helped draft the South's secession ordinance and then served the Confederate government during the Civil War.

Chesnut was also a gifted writer. She began her daily journal in 1860 and revised it after the Civil War. While the basis for A Diary from Dixie (1905) is her daily journal, her composition process was more akin to that of fiction. She willed her diary to her friend Isabella Martin, who cut it to a third of its original length before publishing it in 1905. Ben Ames Williams, a novelist, edited a more complete version in 1949, including much of the interesting gossip and rumors that had been cut from the first edition. The historian Vann Woodward edited yet another version from original manuscripts, Mary Chesnut's Civil War (1981).

The Diary gives an invaluable record of Confederate society and war efforts, as well as a frank picture of the Chesnuts' marriage. Although her views on African Americans are far from enlightened by modern standards, Mary Chesnut hated slavery and the necessity for women to pretend innocence about the mulatto children in their households. Along with its engaging picture of Confederate life, Chesnut's Diary reveals the dilemma of women of wit and intelligence in a repressive society.

(Bowker Author Biography)