Title: Mary%20Rowlandson%20
1Mary Rowlandson Narrative of the Captivity and
Restoration
- American
Literature I - 10/11/2004
- Cecilia H.C. Liu
2Brief Biographical Background on Mary Rowlandson
(c. 1636-1711)
- Mary Rowlandson was born circa 1637-1638 in
England. With her parents John and Joan White,
she sailed for Salem in 1639. Joseph Rowlandson
became a minister in 1654 and two years later he
and Mary were married. They had a child, Mary,
who lived for three years their other children
were Joseph, b. 1661 Mary, b. 1665 Sarah, b.
1669. At the time of their capture, the children
were 14, 10, and 6.
3Capture and Redemption
- In 1675 Joseph Rowlandson. went to Boston to beg
for help from the Massachusetts General Assembly,
during which period Mary Rowlandson was captured.
After her redemption, the couple lived in Boston
and then moved 1677 to Wethersfield, Connecticut.
Joseph Rowlandson died 24 November 1678 after
preaching a powerful fast-day jeremiad.
4Disgrace in the family
- Mary Rowlandson remarried 6 Aug 1679 to Captain
Samuel Talcott. He died in 1691 she lived until
1710. Disgrace later came to the family her son
Joseph got his brother-in-law drunk and sold him
into servitude in Virginia.
5Mary Rowlandsons Travel
- While a prisoner, Mary Rowlandson traveled some
150 miles, from Lancaster to Menamaset then
north to Northfield and across the Connecticut
river to meet with King Philip/Metacomet himself,
sachem of the Wampanoags. Next she traveled up
into southwestern New Hampshire, south to
Menamaset, and north to Mount Wachusett.
6Rowlandson's narrative
- According to Katherine Derounian-Stodola,
"Introducing her work in all four 1682 editions
was an anonymous preface to the reader, signed
only 'per Amicum' (By a Friend), but almost
certainly written by Increase Mather. In 1681,
Mather had proposed to a group of Puritan
ministers that they collect stories of 'special
providences' concerning New England to be
evaluated, sorted, and eventually anthologized.
Quite probably Rowlandson's narrative was among
the providential accounts he received, but owing
to its length, local currency, and intrinsic
worth, he may have suggested separate publication
and agreed to help. . ."
7captivity narrative
- Mary Rowlandson, a Puritan wife and mother,
published only one book during her life. That
book, however, not only became one of the era's
best-sellers, but earned her an important place
in the history of American literature. A
Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of
Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, an account of her captivity
among the Narragansett Indians during King
Philip's War in the 1670s, is a frequently cited
example of a captivity narrative, an important
American literary genre used by James Fenimore
Cooper, Ann Bleecker, John Williams, and James
Seaver.
8- Because of Rowlandson's intimate relationship
with her Indian captors, her book also is
interesting for its treatment of cultural
contact. Finally, in its use of autobiography,
typology, and the jeremiad, Rowlandson's book
helps us to understand the Puritan mind.
9King Philip's War
- A general Indian uprising in 1675-76 to resist
continued expansion of the English colonies in
New England. It was the bloodiest of the Indian
wars in terms of relative casualties, and several
tribes were virtually or totally eliminated. Six
hundred colonists were killed, which included
about one-fifth of all the men fit for military
service. - Philip was the Christian name assigned to
Metacomet (known as King Philip or Metacom), a
war chief or sachem of the Wampanoag Indians.
Massachusetts colonial settlers frequently
referred to the Native chiefs as Kings.
10THE OLD TRAIL TO KING PHILIP'S FORT AT SQUAKEAG
11A Puritan and Narragansets
12 A current paperback book
cover What different "appeals" to emotion do you
find in these two covers? How do you explain the
differences?
Cover of first edition, showing Mary shooting a
musket
13(No Transcript)
14London,A True History of the Captivity and
Restoration, (1682 The Newberry Library)
15 LOOKING TOWARD KING PHILIP'S FORT AT SQUAKEAG ON
THE CONNECTICUT RIVER
16 MOUNT WACHUSETT
17Here negotiations for her ransom began toward the
end of April. On May 2, 1676, Mary Rowlandson was
exchanged at Redemption Rock for a ransom of
twenty English pounds.
18When she returned to Lancaster, there was not one
European to be seen or one house left standing.
19 The tree marks the site of the ROWLANDSON
house in 1676.
20Study Questions
- Discuss the relationship between mourning and
religious faith in Rowlandsons Narrative. How
does Rowlandson mourn her losses, and how does
she integrate this mourning into a faith in Gods
will and plan? - Discuss how Rowlandson integrates her
characterization of the Indians as barbarous
creatures with a respect for them as agents of
Gods will.
21References
- Mary Rowlandson Captive in 1675/76 (with some
photos) http//www.bio.umass.edu/biology/conn.rive
r/mary.html - American Literature Survey I by Dr. Ron
Tranquilla - http//www.eng.fju.edu.tw/ron/american_lit1/index.
htmReports - Mary Rowlandson (c. 1636-1711) http//guweb2.gonz
aga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl310/ - rowland.htm
- http//www.chapmanbillies.com/Narrative.html
- http//www.neiu.edu/edepartm/dep/profs/scherm/218
/ - colonial.htm
- Who was Mary Rowlandson http//rowlandson.nrsd.n
et/about/mary.html