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Captivity Narratives and the Puritan Literary Marketplace

Explore the origins and development of captivity narratives in British North America, their popularity in the Puritan literary marketplace, and their significance as allegorical representations of the Puritan Myth of a Chosen People.

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Captivity Narratives and the Puritan Literary Marketplace

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  1. Captivity Narratives and the Puritan Literary Marketplace English 516 Dr. Roggenkamp

  2. Where did books come from in British North America? • At first, imported only • Phenomenally expensive • First printing press in North America: Mexico (1540) • But first English press not until 1638: Cambridge, Mass. (Harvard) • FYI: First surviving publication: The Bay Psalm Book, 1640 Image: Whole Books of Psalmes, Cambridge, Mass, 1640

  3. Early Literary Trends in Puritan America • First 25 years of “American” literature (American-printed): hymnals, religious primers, theologies, sermons, almanacs • Next press in America not until 1685 in Philadelphia • Boston most “bookish” of Colonial cities through Revolution • Seat of American literature—sets pace for what is printed in America and what people in America read until mid-nineteenth century

  4. 1660s: A First Literary “Boom” • New kind of literary marketplace starts to develop 1660s • Prices start to come down slightly • Genres: captivity narratives, sensational and vivid jeremiads—both the result of and a contributor to new popular marketplace

  5. First 50 Years of American Best-Sellers • Over 1000 copies sold • 1662 The Day of Doom (Wigglesworth) • 1664 A Call to the Unconverted • 1665 A Practice to Piety • 1679 A Guide to Heaven • 1681 The Pilgrim’s Progress • 1682 Captivity and Restoration (Rowlandson) • 1688 Essays (Sir Francis Bacon) • 1699 God’s Protecting Providence • 1707 Redeemed Captive Returning to Zion

  6. Indian Captivity Narratives • Dominated popular publications from late 17th century, well into 19th century • Initially: First person, non-fictional accounts written by people who survived experience of captivity, usually English taken captive by Native Americans • Reasons: revenge, ransom, replacement of lost tribe members • Around 750 captivities 1677-1750

  7. Real Life Endings • Ransomed for money • Traded for Indians taken captive by English • Escape from captors • Murder captors • Assimilation and adoption into Native culture • Conversion (e.g. to Catholicism) • Killed by captors • Suicide

  8. Basic Formula of Narratives • Separation: Description of event leading to captivity • Trials and sufferings: Traveling deeper into wilderness, farther away from Puritan civilization • Struggle between assimilation and maintaining separate cultural identity • Growth in moral and spiritual strength • Return to Puritan society to write account • Allegory of Christian salvation

  9. Captivity and the Puritan Myth of a Chosen People • New Israel crossing sea to enter wilderness full of devils • Meet trials • Captivity gives clues to what damnation feels like • Redemption—allegory for soul’s salvation—a lived allegory of salvation • Soul held in bondage to flesh • Captive’s ultimate redemption likened to regeneration of soul

  10. Development of Captivity Narrative • Late 17th century: Direct religious documents; first person (Mary Rowlandson) • Early 18th century: propagandistic tracts; anti-French, anti-Catholic, anti-Indian (e.g. John Williams) • Mid to late 18th century: stylized, melodramatic; resemble newly popular sentimental novels • 19th century: almost wholly fictionalized works incorporating motif of captivity • Appropriation in slave narratives, Native American narratives

  11. Development of captivity narratives . . . Rowlandson in 1682, Boston vs. England

  12. Development of captivity narratives . . . Rowlandson in 1773

  13. John Williams, The Redeemed Captive returning to Zion (1707) “Panther” Narrative, 1777 More examples . . .

  14. Mary Jemison narrative, 1824 1853 captivity narrative More examples . . .

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