Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
A Cuban woman who moved to New Orleans in the 1850s and eloped with her American lover, Loreta Janeta Velazquez fought in the Civil War for the Confederacy as the cross-dressing Harry T. Buford. As Buford, she single-handedly organized an Arkansas regiment; participated in the historic battles of Bull Run, Balls Bluff, Fort Donelson, and Shiloh; romanced men and women; and eventually decided that spying as a woman better suited her Confederate cause than fighting as a man. In the North, she posed as a double agent and worked to traffic information, drugs, and counterfeit bills to support the Confederate cause. She was even hired by the Yankee secret service to find andquot;the woman . . . traveling and figuring as a Confederate agentandquot;andmdash;Velazquez herself.
Originally published in 1876 as The Woman in Battle, this Civil War narrative offers Velazquezandrsquo;s seemingly impossible autobiographical account, as well as a new critical introduction and glossary by Jesse Alemandaacute;n. Scholars are divided between those who read the book as a generally honest autobiography and those who read it as mostly fiction. According to Alemandaacute;nandrsquo;s critical introduction, the book also reads as pulp fiction, spy memoir, seduction narrative, travel literature, and historical account, while it mirrors the literary conventions of other first-person female accounts of cross-dressing published in the United States during wartime, dating back to the Revolutionary War. Whatever the facts are, this is an authentic Civil War narrative, Alemandaacute;n concludes, that recounts how war disrupts normal gender roles, redefines national borders, and challenges the definition of identity.
About the Author
Jesse Alemandaacute;n is assistant professor of English at the University of New Mexico.