Rowlandson, Equiano And Douglass: Horrid Captivity Narratives

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Imagine being taken away from your family and friends due to invadors, stroming in distroying the only home you have ever know. Being taking away thousands miles away, going to a place unknowm, surrounded by people whom you don’t know; but with familar of your invadors. Rowlandson, Equiano, and Douglass wrote narratives detailing their experiences in captivity. These narratives expose the brutality of the Native and English invadors while also expressing the growth of these writers through the difficulty of being in the unknown. Rowlandson, Equiano, and Douglass narrative’s have simalities in elements, plot, and growth within themselves; along with the use literary elements to paint vivie pictures of their survival during there horrid …show more content…

These narratives show a clear, unmistakable and personal perspective of how they had the will to stay live while having a rational mind throughtout their imprisonment . These narratives give a horrifying look into the barbaric reality of imprisionment in different perceptives. Olaudah Equiano was one of the original slaves from Africa and began life as a free man, and he recalls his childhood as a very happy time in his life. Equiano begins with a vibirant beautiful description of his village where the people lived a simple lives steered by their own spirituality. Equiano's separation from his family and fellow villiagers seemed to be one of the biggest hardships he faced. After being kidnapped, Equiano was eventually put on a slave ship bound for the New World. Once on the ship, he described the slaves being chained together,and forced to live in their own manure and disease.Each author expresses thier beatings differently as well. Equiano accounts the first whipping he received on the slave ship, Equiano expressed it as being whipped severely. While Douglass accounts his beating as more burtal stating Covey rushed at him, torn his clothing off, and whipped him repeatedly. Mary Rowlandson describes the attack in Lancaster by the Narraganset Native Americans as them arriving at sunrise and kill men, women, and children while burning their homes. Rowlanson and her children were met with hails of bullets, while being forcused to exit Garrison. Rowlandson and her youngest daughter Sarah were both injuried while her brother-in-law, nephew, and sister are all killed. Mrs. Rowlandson and her children, are taken

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