ECU Libraries Catalog

Ambrose Bierce and the period of honorable strife : the Civil War and the emergence of an American writer / Christopher Kiernan Coleman.

Author/creator Coleman, Christopher Kiernan, 1949- author.
Format Book and Print
EditionFirst edition.
Publication Info Knoxville, Tenn. : The University of Tennessee Press, [2016]
Copyright Notice ©2016
Description296 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Subject(s)
Contents Green and Salad Days -- Bad Boys Make Good Soldiers -- On a Mountain -- Unfamiliar Landscapes -- What He Saw of Shiloh -- Excursions and Alarums: Corinth, Owl Creek, and Perryville -- Stones River -- Sitzkrieg to Blitzkrieg -- Chickamauga -- Besieged -- Lieb und Krieg -- Crimes and Misdemeanors: The Atlanta Campaign -- Casualties of War -- What Happens: The Road to Franklin -- A Son of the Gods: The Battle of Nashville and After -- In High Cotton: Carpetbaggers, Confederates, and Corruption -- Phantoms and Presentiments.
Scope and content "While biographers have made much of the influence of the Civil War on Bierce and his work, none have undertaken to write a detailed account of his war experience. Likewise, among literary critics, Bierce's status in nineteenth-century American realism has led critics to explore the relationship of his wartime experiences to his output, but they have often done so without a deep understanding of his wartime experience. This manuscript concentrates closely on that experience, examining Bierce's few autobiographical writings, official records, secondary sources, and his works to come up with a portrait of the Ambrose Bierce during the Civil War era"-- Provided by publisher.
Scope and content "In the spring of 1861, Ambrose Bierce, just shy of nineteen, became Private Bierce of the Ninth Indiana Volunteer Infantry. For the next four years, Bierce marched and fought throughout the western theater of the Civil War. Because of his searing wartime experience, Bierce became a key writer in the history of American literary realism. Scholars have long asserted that there are concrete connections between Bierce's fiction and his service, but surprisingly no biographer has focused solely on Bierce's formative Civil War career and made these connections clear. Christopher K. Coleman uses Ambrose Bierce's few autobiographical writings about the war and a deep analysis of his fiction to help readers see and feel the muddy, bloody world threatening Bierce and his fellow Civil War soldiers. Across the Tennessee River from the battle of Shiloh, Bierce, who could only hear the battle in the darkness writes, 'The death-line was an arc of which the river was the chord.' Ambrose Bierce and the Period of Honorable Strife is a fascinating account of the movements of the Ninth Indiana Regiment--a unit that saw as much action as any through the war--and readers will come to know the men and leaders, the deaths and glories, of this group from its most insightful observer. Using Bierce's writings and a detective's skill to provide a comprehensive view of Bierce's wartime experience, Coleman creates a vivid portrait of a man and a war. Not simply a tale of one writer's experience, this meticulously researched book traces the human costs of the Civil War. From small early skirmishes in western Virginia through the horrors of Shiloh to narrowly escaping death from a Confederate sniper's bullet during the battle of Kennesaw Mountain, Bierce emerges as a writer forged in war, and Coleman's gripping narrative is a genuine contribution to our understanding of the Western Theater and the development of a protean writer"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Genre/formBiography.
Genre/formCriticism, interpretation, etc.
Genre/formHistory.
LCCN 2015039994
ISBN9781621901792 (hardcover ; alkaline paper)
ISBN1621901793 (hardcover ; alkaline paper)

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner General Stacks PS1097.Z5 C65 2016 ✔ Available Place Hold