In Charles Chesnutt's "Women Wife", he showed many dilemmas in his living life. One of the dilemmas is that the social status of free people has little room for improvement compared with whites, making them hard to survive. As slaves, they only have to work outdoors, so free people can not read or write, they are not used to going alone by themselves. They are still considered to be inferior, but there is little work to fund the need for life. Another dilemma shown in the story is that when they become slaves they are sold to different planters and separated from their families and the people they care about.
"His youthful wife" is a short story by American writer Charles W. Chesnut, first published in July 1898. After that, as a title story of "Youth's Wife" series and "Other color stories" series. The book was first published in 1899 and in the same year Chesnutt published his collection of short stories "The Conjure Woman". "Young wife of his youth" is characterized by an upwardly moving, thin skin Mulato male, a respected member of the Blue-Med society of the Midwestern city. When a darker woman came to him to find her husband, he was preparing to marry another skin thin Mulat woman who had not seen it for 25 years. This story was recognized positively after publication and became the most anthology of chesnut.
Shortly after the end of the American Civil War, Charles Chesnart's "Women's Youth" was impressed with his literary taste and often tells Mr. Rider's story called "Black and White". Personal term of European mixed-blood. But when his ex-wife Riza Zane appeared to look for him, his past met him and faced problems related to racial identity, social mobility and debt.
Chesner's second most important novel "Youth's wife and other color stories" was published by Horton Mifflin in 1899. In the nine episodes of Ohio and North Carolina fiction, Chesnutt studied the sociological and psychological impact that Jim Crow's laws and practices have on white, black, and mixed ethnic communities. Like The Conjure Woman, he often uses elements of dialects and local colors. However, unlike other stories, many of his "young wives" are middle-class African Americans of mixed-race ethnicity. Among the "main question", "youth's wife", and "her Virginia mummy", Chesner is very ironic and sometimes ironically something ironically confronting the difficulties confronted by ethnically mixed individuals It reveals dark shadows in Africa. Strong biases by Americans. In fact, Chesnutt himself is a product of mixed race and his two grandfathers are white.