A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, by Mary Rowlandson

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“A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson” by Mary Rowlandson is a short history about her personal experience in captivity among the Wampanoag Indian tribe. On the one hand, Mary Rowlandson endures many hardships and derogatory encounters. However, she manages to show her superior status to everyone around her. She clearly shows how her time spent under captivity frequently correlates with the lessons taught in the Bible. Even though, the colonists possibly murdered their chief, overtook their land, and tried to starve the Native Americans by burning down their corn, which was their main source of food, she displays them as demonizing savages carrying out the devil's plan. There are many struggles shown during the story, both physical and emotional, but her greatest struggle is her ability to prove the satanic nature of the Indians without diminishing her reputation, but, instead, elevating herself into a martyr-like figure. From beginning to end, Mrs. Rowlandson strives to display that she is an immaculate Puritan, that within the Indian tribe and the Puritan community she has superiority, and that the Indians are barbaric creatures possessing satanic dangers.

In the Puritan communities, religion was not just a belief, but a way of life. Puritans were god fearing. They spent a great deal of time reading the bible and going to church. Puritans believed they were the “chosen ones” and that God was responsible for all favorable activity. Mary Rowlandson demonstrates that she was a great Puritan, and that God had specifically chosen her. She praises God for any good fortune received or deed accepted by her from the Indians. During her fourteenth remove, it began to rain, and the Indians co...

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...t of time spend with the Wampanoag tribe. It is also very unlikely that she could remember such details about her experience, seeing as she must have been in a shocked state of mind. The many struggles that she suffers are very evident in the narrative, but the biggest one is her attempt to refrain from contradicting herself.

Works Cited

Derounian, Kathryn A. “The Publication, Promotion, and Distribution of Mary Rowlandson's

Indian Captivity Narrative in the Seventeenth Century.” University of North Carolina Press

23.3 (1988): 239-61. Jstor. Web. 12 Oct. 2011. .

Franklin, Wayne, Philip F. Gura, and Arnold Krupat. The Norton Anthology of American

Literature. Vol. A. Ed. Nina Baym and Julia Reidhead. 17 ed. New York: W.W. Norton &

Company, Inc, 2007. 5 vols. 235-67. print.

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