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Macaria Macaria; or Altars of Sacrifice, the third novel by Columbus native Augusta Jane Evans, was published in 1864, during the Civil War (1861-65). The book served as propaganda for the Confederate cause and helped to redefine the role of Confederate women during the war. Macaria became a best seller in the Confederacy, with 20,000 copies in circulation by the war's end, and secured Evans's status as a leading female southern writer. Northern generals banned the book for fear of its sympathetic Southern message taking hold among Union troops. Themes Evans
Evans relied on authentic accounts of the war and her own experiences to write Macaria, even lifting whole passages from her personal letters. The first part of the novel focuses on the lives of its motherless heroines, Irene and Electra, in the years prior to secession. Irene, who comes from a wealthy plantation family, befriends the poorer Electra, who lives with her aunt, Mrs. Aubrey, and Mrs. Aubrey's son, Russell. Mrs. Aubrey serves as a mother figure for the two girls. Troubled by his daughter's association with the Aubreys, Irene's father sends her to a northern boarding school, where she studies not only domestic arts but also such classical subjects as astronomy. The
In addition to its theme of sacrificing domestic comfort for a greater cause, Macaria also challenges long-held ideas about gender by advocating that unmarried women should have opportunities to support themselves. Despite her call for women's financial independence in the novel, however, Evans ultimately supported the South's traditional social hierarchies of race, class, and gender. According to the historian Drew Gilpin Faust, Evans backed away from some of her more unconventional ideas, particularly her somewhat radical stance on women, in the postwar years. She did not endorse women's political participation, for example, and after the war she spoke out against the feminist and woman suffrage movements of the North. Editions Although
By 1896 several new editions had been printed in the North. Some passages were shortened or clarified, and large passages of Confederate propaganda as well as passages critical of the federal government were cut out entirely. In 1992 Faust edited a new edition of Macaria, which reinstates the novel's original text. Suggested Reading Drew Gilpin Faust, introduction to Macaria, by Augusta Evans Wilson (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1992). William Perry Fidler, Augusta Evans Wilson, 1835-1909: A Biography (University: University of Alabama Press, 1951). Anne Sophie Riepma, Fire and Fiction: Augusta Jane Evans in Context (Amsterdam; Atlanta: Rodopi, 2000). Heather L. Whittaker, University of Georgia Published 6/18/2010 |
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