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The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
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#7 The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mary Rowlandson
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Cleo
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Feb 20, 2015 11:39AM

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I've drowned this month! I can't figure out how the heck it became the 20 try and I have yet to actually finish a book of hardly any pages in general.

Yeh, what happened to you? You've been AWOL for quite awhile and don't seem to be getting much time to read. I have oodles of sympathy for you. Does it look like you may have more reading time in your future?

I do intend to go back and finish the other narratives in the book I have.
I did find some of her narrative points interesting as to viewed through her eyes.

The introduction said that there was little problem between the Americans and the Inidans (they mentioned that the Indian would always ask if they were Boston Men or Kings men, so perhaps there was more problem with the English). I did note though, that the trading was a business and therefore it would be in everyone's best interests to keep things friendly in order to earn $$$$$$. Sorry to be cynical, but there you have it.

When I was reading The Winthrop Woman I could see the mechanical look at life from the parts written on John Winthrop. It also includes Indian encounters, and while I think Elizabeth was privileged in many ways because of her relation to John Winthrop she set out to live away from that as much as she could. She still did live an easier life probably, but not without its many downs. Anywhi off topic a bit, especially since it is historical fiction and doesn't fit the non-fiction theme here, but it was taken from her journals so not overly liberalized with the story.

It will be a busy few months with her, and it isn't confined to just weekend, some weeknights as well.

Sure, the scalpings, raids and massacres happened, but that isn't the only history we have with Indian's. Unfortunately it seems like the bulk of history taught in schools here regarding the subject is only these things and they make it out to be that none lived harmoniously next to each other ever.

I think I see what you mean about the mechanical aspect of the narrative, and I really think it has to do with the times and her Puritan lifestyle.
Let's imagine, these people, esp. women, were probably not expected to be excitable, expressive, living-out-loud, right? Everything had to be about self-control. We're not talking Jane Austen's and Louisa May-Alcott's here. So it makes total sense that their experience in writing would be to a bare minimum, and anything else would have been totally edited.
What do you think?

A big question and I think I'll have to back up a bit to answer.
I've been increasingly bothered by the gender themes forced on books and the feminist perspective, when people read nowadays. (I'll say that in this group, because I think I'm relatively safe here. :-) ) People now tout how women were disrespected and oppressed and that they wished they could break out of the mold set for them, treating it as if ALL women felt that way in historical times, and yet basing the women's feelings (or what we think their feelings should be) from a modern viewpoint. Yet, when we read Eliot, or Shelley, or Woolf, etc. I think we have people who are not only artistic, but are unusual for the times they live in. They represent a section of women, but I think a very small section and perhaps one of the reasons they become writers is to be able to work out their frustrations in a way that they are unable to in their society because ......... their society probably does not hold the same views as them and, to go further, perhaps doesn't even understand their views. They are in the minority. So when people use their literature to promote their feminist objectives and to pity these historical women, they often aren't representing something that was real. HOWEVER, (I'm getting to my point ...... honest) we are so used to reading these types books from women, that are really out of the mainstream thinking of those times, that when a book comes along that represents the actual majority of the views of the society, it feels WEIRD. We think, how can someone say that? How can someone think that way? Ugh! We're just not used to it.
So, to make my long opinion short, I think, instead of writing in a way that challenges her society (and therefore she would be on the outskirts of it), Rowlandson represents society as how it is, and as readers, it's not something with which we're familiar. She is Puritan, she is sparse, she is not a deep thinker and that's just the way it is. And that's probably the way it was with most women in her immediate society.

It isn't always in ones best interest to speak out when they weigh the ripple effect.
I know I will find myself thinking wow while reading some books, thinking how did they put up with that (applies across the board, as even men had social boxes they needed to fit in). It does require one to think, what time period was this written in, by who is it written and what is the subject matter, how does this effect the characters and writing style.
Typed on phone, so excuse errors and some choppy thoughts.





I think this biography wins for the one I liked the least, however Flight of the Sparrow: A Novel of Early America at least looks interesting. Hmmm ...... I see that Jillian has reviewed it so I'll take a look at her very looooong review when I have a moment.
Books mentioned in this topic
Flight of the Sparrow (other topics)Flight of the Sparrow (other topics)
The Winthrop Woman (other topics)
The Journal of William Sturgis (other topics)
The Journal of William Sturgis (other topics)