Mary Rowlandson's The Sovereignty and Goodness of God and the various accounts written about Hannah Duston's captivity have become notable as a result of how these two women reacted while taken captive by Native peoples. Both Duston and Rowlandson's narratives differ in some ways, but ultimately the agency they take while captive has led to their texts' continuous popularity in American literature. In my essay titled "Redemption and Revenge: The Legacies of Mary Rowlandson and Hannah Duston", I examine how Duston's agency when seeking revenge is described as heroic, a characteristic not normally associated with women. I do this through focusing on two male writers in particular, Cotton Mather and John Greenleaf Whittier, whose accounts of t...
In 1682, Mary Rowlandson published what would become known as the first “Indian captivity narrative....
This dissertation examines the intersections between human anger and divine wrath in Tudor and Stuar...
I explore how two early modern plays, Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Elizabeth Cary’s The Tragedy of Maria...
The arrival of the Puritans in Massachusetts, the ensuing relationship they developed with the Nativ...
This study examines the major works of Judith Sargent Murray, Hannah Webster Foster, and Susanna Has...
In her work entitled A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson (1682), Ma...
This thesis compares slave narratives written by Mattie J. Jackson and Kate Drumgoold. Both narrator...
Leading into the American Revolution, Puritan captivity narratives gained a resurgent popularity as ...
In this article, I argue that revenge fantasies such as those found in the Oracles Against the Natio...
The story of Hannah Duston brings forth a new image of the captive Puritan woman, one that is bearin...
After colonist Mary Rowlandson was captured by Native Americans during King Philip's War, food and l...
This thesis explores women's apostate narratives in antebellum America, focusing on best-selling lit...
Captivity narrative, the American genre initiated early in the seventeenth century, tells the story ...
CITATION: Claassens, L. J. M. 2017. Beyond revenge? : responsible Bible reading practices in a traum...
The story of Susanna tells of a woman sexually assaulted, accused of adultery, sentenced to death, a...
In 1682, Mary Rowlandson published what would become known as the first “Indian captivity narrative....
This dissertation examines the intersections between human anger and divine wrath in Tudor and Stuar...
I explore how two early modern plays, Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Elizabeth Cary’s The Tragedy of Maria...
The arrival of the Puritans in Massachusetts, the ensuing relationship they developed with the Nativ...
This study examines the major works of Judith Sargent Murray, Hannah Webster Foster, and Susanna Has...
In her work entitled A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson (1682), Ma...
This thesis compares slave narratives written by Mattie J. Jackson and Kate Drumgoold. Both narrator...
Leading into the American Revolution, Puritan captivity narratives gained a resurgent popularity as ...
In this article, I argue that revenge fantasies such as those found in the Oracles Against the Natio...
The story of Hannah Duston brings forth a new image of the captive Puritan woman, one that is bearin...
After colonist Mary Rowlandson was captured by Native Americans during King Philip's War, food and l...
This thesis explores women's apostate narratives in antebellum America, focusing on best-selling lit...
Captivity narrative, the American genre initiated early in the seventeenth century, tells the story ...
CITATION: Claassens, L. J. M. 2017. Beyond revenge? : responsible Bible reading practices in a traum...
The story of Susanna tells of a woman sexually assaulted, accused of adultery, sentenced to death, a...
In 1682, Mary Rowlandson published what would become known as the first “Indian captivity narrative....
This dissertation examines the intersections between human anger and divine wrath in Tudor and Stuar...
I explore how two early modern plays, Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Elizabeth Cary’s The Tragedy of Maria...