Analysis of the "Captivity Narrative" by Mary Rowlandson
Analysis of the "Captivity Narrative" by Mary Rowlandson
A narrative of Mary Rowlandson, a symbol of the New England Puritan Experience, during King Phillip's war of 1675.
3,290 words (
approx. 13.2 pages) |
9 sources |
MLA | 2002
Paper Summary:
This paper explores the construction and meaning of Mary Rowlandson's famous Captivity Narrative, first published in 1682 which tells how she was held captive during King Philip's War of 1675 by Algonquin Indians. The author explains how her autobiographical narrative reveals her religious fervor and struggles, within the context of New England Puritan thought. Within this paper on the Captivity Narrative, there is an analysis of Calvinist thought, and insight into White New Englander prejudices against the Algonquin Indians, and how those prejudices were influenced by a loathing of the Catholic Church.
From the Paper:
Mary Rowlandson was captured by the Indians from her home in Lancaster, Massachusetts, during King Philip's War of 1675. She wrote a narrative about her captivity and "restoration"; which was so widely read that its popularity lasted for another century and more, after its first publication in 1682. Rowlandson's captivity narrative was reissued in Boston in 1770, 1771, and 1773, and it was also released many more times in various colonies and states during the 19th century. (Slotkin: 1973, p. 96). Thus it became one of the most representative documents by which white New Englanders remembered King Philip's War. But just how representative was Rowlandson's narrative, when it came to the realities of the conflict, on both sides, Puritan and Indian? Having been trapped in the wilderness as a prisoner of war, and surviving, Mary Rowlandson saw herself as spiritually renewed and redeemed. While many of the events in her account are probably true, her narrative is still somewhat mythical and shaped, both consciously and unconsciously, to fit her religious and cultural ideals.
Analysis of the "Captivity Narrative" by Mary Rowlandson (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 09, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Analytical-Essay-Analysis-of-the-Captivity-Narrative-by-Mary-Rowlandson/4789
"Analysis of the "Captivity Narrative" by Mary Rowlandson" 15 January 2012. Web. 09 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Analytical-Essay-Analysis-of-the-Captivity-Narrative-by-Mary-Rowlandson/4789>