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Captivity narrative

Captivity narratives are usually stories of people captured by enemies whom they consider uncivilized, or whose beliefs and customs they oppose. The best-known captivity narratives in North America are those concerning Europeans and Americans taken as captives and held by the indigenous peoples of North America. These narratives have had an enduring place in literature, history, ethnography, and the study of Native peoples.

The Abduction of Daniel Boone's Daughter by the Indians, Charles Ferdinand Wimar, 1853

They were preceded, among English-speaking peoples, by publication of captivity narratives related to English people taken captive and held by Barbary pirates, or sold for ransom or slavery. Others were taken captive in the Middle East. These accounts established some of the major elements of the form, often putting it within a religious framework, and crediting God or Providence for gaining freedom or salvation. Following the North American experience, additional accounts were written after British people were captured during exploration and settlement in India and East Asia.

Since the late 20th century, captivity narratives have also been studied as accounts of persons leaving, or held in contemporary religious cults or movements, thanks to scholars of religion like David G. Bromley and James R. Lewis.

Traditionally, historians have made limited use of many captivity narratives. They regarded the genre with suspicion because of its ideological underpinnings. As a result of new scholarly approaches since the late 20th century, historians with a more certain grasp of Native American cultures are distinguishing between plausible statements of fact and value-laden judgments in order to study the narratives as rare sources from "inside" Native societies.[1]

In addition, modern historians such as Linda Colley and anthropologists such as Pauline Turner Strong have also found the North American narratives useful in analyzing how the colonists or settlers constructed the "other". They also assess these works for what the narratives reveal about the settlers' sense of themselves and their culture, and the experience of crossing the line to another. Colley has studied the long history of English captivity among other cultures, both the Barbary pirate captives who preceded those in North America, and British captives in cultures such as India or East Asia, which began after the early North American experience.

Certain North American captivity narratives related to being held among Native peoples were published from the 18th through the 19th centuries. They reflected an already well-established genre in English literature, which some colonists would likely have been familiar with. There had already been numerous English accounts of captivity by Barbary pirates.

Other types of captivity narratives, such as those recounted by apostates from religious movements (i.e. "cult survivor" tales), have remained an enduring topic in modern media. They have been published in books, and periodicals, in addition to being the subjects of film and television programs, both fiction and non-fiction.[2]

Background Edit

 
Elisa Bravo Jaramillo by Raymond Monvoisin

Because of the competition between New France and New England in North America, raiding between the colonies was frequent. Colonists in New England were frequently taken captive by Canadiens and their Indian allies (similarly, the New Englanders and their Indian allies took Canadiens and Indian prisoners captive). According to Kathryn Derounian-Stodola, statistics on the number of captives taken from the 15th through the 19th centuries are imprecise and unreliable, since record-keeping was not consistent and the fate of hostages who disappeared or died was often not known.[3] Yet conservative estimates run into the thousands, and a more realistic figure may well be higher. Between King Philip's War (1675) and the last of the French and Indian Wars (1763), approximately 1,641 New Englanders were taken hostage.[4] During the decades-long struggle between whites and Plains Indians in the mid-19th century, hundreds of women and children were captured.[5]

Many narratives included a theme of redemption by faith in the face of the threats and temptations of an alien way of life. Barbary captivity narratives, accounts of English people captured and held by Barbary pirates, were popular in England in the 16th and 17th centuries. The first Barbary captivity narrative by a resident of North America was that of Abraham Browne (1655). The most popular was that of Captain James Riley, entitled An Authentic Narrative of the Loss of the Brig Commerce (1817).[citation needed]

Jonathan Dickinson's Journal, God's Protecting Providence ... (1699), is an account by a Quaker of shipwreck survivors captured by Indians in Florida. He says they survived by placing their trust in God to protect them. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature describes it as, "in many respects the best of all the captivity tracts."[6]

Ann Eliza Bleecker's epistolary novel, The History of Maria Kittle (1793), is considered the first known captivity novel. It set the form for subsequent Indian capture novels.[7]

Origins of narratives Edit

New England and the Southern colonies Edit

 
Hannah Duston by Junius Brutus Stearns

American Indian captivity narratives, accounts of men and women of European descent who were captured by Native Americans, were popular in both America and Europe from the 17th century until the close of the United States frontier late in the 19th century. Mary Rowlandson's memoir, A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, (1682) is a classic example of the genre. According to Nancy Armstrong and Leonard Tennenhouse, Rowlandson's captivity narrative was "one of the most popular captivity narratives on both sides of the Atlantic."[8] Although the text temporarily fell out of print after 1720, it had a revival of interest in the 1780s. Other popular captivity narratives from the late 17th century include Cotton Mather's "A Notable Exploit: Dux Faemina Facti," on the captivity of Hannah Duston, as well as his account of Hannah Swarton's captivity (1697), both well-known accounts of the capture of women during King William's War, and Jonathan Dickinson's God's Protecting Providence (1699).

American captivity narratives were usually based on true events, but they frequently contained fictional elements as well. Some were entirely fictional, created because the stories were popular. One spurious captivity narrative was The Remarkable Adventures of Jackson Johonnet, of Massachusetts (Boston, 1793).[citation needed] Another is that of Nelson Lee.

Captivity in another culture brought into question many aspects of the captives' lives. Reflecting their religious beliefs, the Puritans tended to write narratives that negatively characterized Indians. They portrayed the trial of events as a warning from God concerning the state of the Puritans' souls, and concluded that God was the only hope for redemption. Such a religious cast had also been part of the framework of earlier English accounts of captivity by Barbary pirates. The numerous conflicts between Anglo-American colonists and the French and Native Americans led to the emphasis of Indians' cruelty in English-language captivity narratives, which served to inspire hatred for their enemies.[9][page needed] In William Flemming's Narrative of the Sufferings (1750), Indian barbarities are blamed on the teachings of Roman Catholic priests.[9][page needed]

During Queen Anne's War, French and Abenaki warriors made the Raid on Deerfield in 1704, killing many settlers and taking more than 100 persons captive. They were taken on a several hundred-mile overland trek to Montreal. Many were held there in Canada for an extended period, with some captives adopted by First Nations families and others held for ransom. In the colonies, ransoms were raised by families or communities; there was no higher government program to do so. The minister John Williams was among those captured and ransomed. His account, The Redeemed Captive (1707), was widely distributed in the 18th and 19th centuries, and continues to be published today. Due to his account, as well as the high number of captives, this raid, unlike others of the time, was remembered and became an element in the American frontier story.[10]

During Father Rale's War, Indians raided Dover, New Hampshire. Elizabeth Hanson wrote a captivity narrative after gaining return to her people. Susannah Willard Johnson of New Hampshire wrote about her captivity during the French and Indian War (the North American front of the Seven Years' War).

In the final 30 years of the 18th century, there was a revival of interest in captivity narratives. Accounts such as A Narrative of the Capture and Treatment of John Dodge, by the English at Detroit (1779), A Surprising Account, of the Captivity and Escape of Philip M'Donald, and Alexander M'Leod, of Virginia, from the Chickkemogga Indians (1786), Abraham Panther's A Very Surprising Narrative of a Young Woman, Who Was Discovered in a Rocky Cave (1787), Narrative of the Remarkable Occurrences, in the Life of John Blatchford of Cape-Ann (1788), and A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Mr. Ebenezer Fletcher, of Newipswich, Who Was ... Taken Prisoner by the British (1798) provided American reading audiences with new narratives. In some accounts, British soldiers were the primary antagonists.

Nova Scotia and Acadia Edit

 
John Payzant (1749–1834) – captive taken at Lunenburg, Nova Scotia

Seven captivity narratives are known that were written following capture of colonists by the Mi'kmaq and Maliseet tribes in Nova Scotia and Acadia (two other prisoners were future Governor Michael Francklin (taken 1754) and Lt John Hamilton (taken 1749) at the Siege of Grand Pre. Whether their captivity experiences were documented is unknown).[11]

The most well-known became that by John Gyles, who wrote Memoirs of odd adventures, strange deliverances, &c. in the captivity of John Gyles, Esq; commander of the garrison on St. George's River (1736). He was captured in the Siege of Pemaquid (1689). He wrote about his torture by the Natives at Meductic village during King William's War. His memoirs are regarded as a precursor to the frontier romances of James Fenimore Cooper, William Gilmore Simms, and Robert Montgomery Bird.[12]

Merchant William Pote was captured during the siege of Annapolis Royal during King George's War and wrote about his captivity. Pote also wrote about being tortured. Ritual torture of war captives was common among Native American tribes, who used it as a kind of passage.[13]

Henry Grace was taken captive by the Mi'kmaq near Fort Cumberland during Father Le Loutre's War. His narrative was entitled, The History of the Life and Sufferings of Henry Grace (Boston, 1764).[14] Anthony Casteel was taken in the Attack at Jeddore during the same war, and also wrote an account of his experience.[15]

The fifth captivity narrative, by John Payzant, recounts his being taken prisoner with his mother and three siblings during the Raid on Lunenburg (1756) by the First Nations (Maliseet/Wolastoqiyik) in the French and Indian War.[16] On route to Quebec, John and his siblings were adopted by the First Nations in present-day New Brunswick but were reunited with their mother in Quebec about seven months later. In the spring of 1760, after the British victory at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759, the family sailed back to Nova Scotia.[17] In a separate event John Witherspoon was captured at Annapolis Royal during the French and Indian War and wrote about his experience.[18]

During the war Gamaliel Smethurst was captured; he published an account in 1774.[19] Lt. Simon Stephens, of John Stark's ranger company, and Captain Robert Stobo escaped together from Quebec along the coast of Acadia, finally reaching British-controlled Louisbourg and wrote accounts.[20][21]

During the Petitcodiac River Campaign, the Acadian militia took prisoner William Caesar McCormick of William Stark's rangers and his detachment of three rangers and two light infantry privates from the 35th. The Acadian militia took the prisoners to Miramachi and then Restogouch.[22] (They were kept by Pierre du Calvet who later released them to Halifax.)[23] In August 1758, William Merritt was taken captive close to St. Georges (Thomaston, Maine), and taken to the Saint John River and later to Quebec.[24]

North Africa Edit

 
British captain witnessing the miseries of Christian slaves in Algiers, 1815

North America was not the only region to produce captivity narratives. North African slave narratives were written by white Europeans and Americans who were captured, often as a result of shipwrecks, and enslaved in North Africa in the 18th and early 19th centuries. If the Europeans converted to Islam and adopted North Africa as their home, they could often end their slavery status, but such actions disqualified them from being ransomed to freedom by European consuls in Africa, who were qualified only to free captives who had remained Christians.[25] About 20,000 British and Irish captives were held in North Africa from the beginning of the 17th century to the middle of the 18th, and roughly 700 Americans were held captive as North African slaves between 1785 and 1815. The British captives produced 15 full biographical accounts of their experiences, and the American captives produced more than 100 editions of 40 full-length narratives.[26]

Types Edit

Assimilated captives Edit

In his book Beyond Geography: The Western Spirit Against the Wilderness (1980), Frederick W. Turner discusses the effect of those accounts in which white captives came to prefer and eventually adopt a Native American way of life; they challenged European-American assumptions about the superiority of their culture. During some occasions of prisoner exchanges, the white captives had to be forced to return to their original cultures. Children who had assimilated to new families found it extremely painful to be torn from them after several years' captivity. Numerous adult and young captives who had assimilated chose to stay with Native Americans and never returned to live in Anglo-American or European communities. The story of Mary Jemison, who was captured as a young girl (1755) and spent the remainder of her 90 years among the Seneca, is such an example.[27]

Where The Spirit Lives, a 1989 film written by Keith Leckie and directed by Bruce Pittman, turns the tables on the familiar white captive/aboriginal captors narrative. It sensitively portrays the plight of Canadian aboriginal children who were captured and sent to residential schools, where they were stripped of their Native identity and forced to conform to Eurocentric customs and beliefs.

The story of Patty Hearst, which unfolded primarily in the mid-1970s, represents a special case. She was initially captured by a domestic U.S. terror group called the Symbionese Liberation Army in February, 1974. About a year later, she was photographed wielding a machine gun, helping them rob a bank. Was she an "assimilated captive" or was she only cooperating as a matter of survival? Was she "brainwashed" or fully conscious, acting with free will? These questions were hotly debated at the time.[28]

Anti-cult captivity narratives Edit

Out of thousands of religious groups, a handful have become associated with acts of violence. This includes the Peoples Temple founded by Jim Jones in 1955, which ended in a murder/suicide claiming the lives of 918 people in November, 1978 in Guyana (see main article: Peoples Temple).

Members of the Peoples Temple who did not die in the murder/suicide are examples of "cult survivors", and the cult survivor meme has become a popular one. A recent American sitcom, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, is premised on the notion of "cult survivor" as a social identity. It is not unusual for anyone who grew up in a religious and culturally conservative household – and who later adopted secular mainstream values – to describe themselves as a "cult survivor", notwithstanding the absence of any abuse or violence. In this sense, "cult survivor" may be used as a polemical term in connection with the so-called "culture war".

Not all anti-cult captivity narratives describe physical capture. Sometimes the capture is a metaphor, as is the escape or rescue. The "captive" may be someone who claims to have been "seduced" or "recruited" into a religious lifestyle which he/she retrospectively describes as one of slavery. The term "captive" may nonetheless be used figuratively.

Some captivity narratives are partly or even wholly fictional, but are meant to impart a strong moral lesson, such as the purported dangers of conversion to a minority faith. Perhaps the most notorious work in this subgenre is The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk,[29] a fictional work circulated during the 19th century and beyond, and used to stoke anti-Catholic sentiment in the U.S. (see main article: Maria Monk).

She claimed to have been born into a Protestant family, but was exposed to Roman Catholicism by attending a convent school. She subsequently resolved to become a Catholic nun, but upon admission to the order at the Hôtel-Dieu nunnery in Montreal, was soon made privy to its dark secrets: the nuns were required to service the priests sexually, and the children born of such liaisons were murdered and buried in a mass grave on the building's premises. Though the Maria Monk work has been exposed as a hoax, it typifies those captivity narratives which depict a minority religion as not just theologically incorrect, but fundamentally abusive.

In Rape-Revenge Films: A Critical Study, Alexandra Heller-Nicholas writes:

The basic structure of the captivity narrative concerns the rescue of "helpless" maidens who have been kidnapped by "natives"[.] [They are] rescued at the last possible moment by a "hero." Commonly, this "hero" is rewarded through marriage. For James R. Lewis, the nineteenth century captivity narrative was intended to either entertain or titillate audiences, or to function as propaganda.[30]

Like James R. Lewis, David G. Bromley is a scholar of religion who draws parallels between the propaganda function of 19th century captivity narratives concerning Native peoples, and contemporary captivity narratives concerning new religious movements. Bromley notes that apostates from such movements frequently cast their accounts in the form of captivity narratives. This in turn provides justification for anti-cult groups to target religious movements for social control measures like deprogramming. In The Politics of Religious Apostasy, Bromley writes:

[T]here is considerable pressure on individuals exiting Subversive organizations to negotiate a narrative with the oppositional coalition that offers an acceptable explanation for participation in the organization and for now once again reversing loyalties. In the limiting case, exiting members without any personal grievance against the organization may find that re-entry into conventional social networks is contingent on at least nominally affirming such opposition coalition claims. The archetypal account that is negotiated is a "captivity narrative" in which apostates assert that they were innocently or naïvely operating in what they had every reason to believe was a normal, secure social site; were subjected to overpowering subversive techniques; endured a period of subjugation during which they experienced tribulation and humiliation; ultimately effected escape or rescue from the organization; and subsequently renounced their former loyalties and issued a public warning of the dangers of the former organization as a matter of civic responsibility. Any expressions of ambivalence or residual attraction to the former organization are vigorously resisted and are taken as evidence of untrustworthiness. Emphasis on the irresistibility of subversive techniques is vital to apostates and their allies as a means of locating responsibility for participation on the organization rather than on the former member.[31]

"Cult survivor" tales have become a familiar genre. They employ the devices of the captivity narrative in dramatic fashion, typically pitting mainstream secular values against the values held by some spiritual minority (which may be caricatured). As is true of the broader category, anti-cult captivity narratives are sometimes regarded with suspicion due to their ideological underpinnings, their formulaic character, and their utility in justifying social control measures. In addition, critics of the genre tend to reject the "mind control" thesis, and to observe that it is extremely rare in Western nations for religious or spiritual groups to hold anyone physically captive.[32]

Like captivity narratives in general, anti-cult captivity narratives also raise contextual concerns. Ethnohistoric Native American culture differs markedly from Western European culture. Each may have its merits within its own context. Modern theorists question the fairness of pitting one culture against another and making broad value judgments.

Similarly, spiritual groups may adopt a different way of life than the secular majority, but that way of life may have merits within its own context. Spiritual beliefs, rituals, and customs are not necessarily inferior simply because they differ from the secular mainstream. Anti-cult captivity narratives which attempt to equate difference with abuse, or to invoke a victim paradigm, may sometimes be criticized as unfair by scholars who believe that research into religious movements should be context-based and value-free.[33] Beliefs, rituals, and customs which we assumed were merely "primitive" or "strange" may turn out to have profound meaning when examined in their own context.[34]

Just as Where the Spirit Lives may be viewed as a "reverse" captivity narrative concerning Native peoples, the story of Donna Seidenberg Bavis (as recounted in The Washington Post[35]) may be viewed as a "reverse" captivity narrative concerning new religious movements. The typical contemporary anti-cult captivity narrative is one in which a purported "victim" of "cult mind control" is "rescued" from a life of "slavery" by some form of deprogramming or exit counseling. However, Donna Seidenberg Bavis was a Hare Krishna devotee (member of ISKCON) who – according to a lawsuit filed on her behalf by the American Civil Liberties Union – was abducted by deprogrammers in February 1977, and held captive for 33 days. During that time, she was subjected to abusive treatment in an effort to "deprogram" her of her religious beliefs. She escaped her captors by pretending to cooperate, then returned to the Krishna temple in Potomac, Maryland. She subsequently filed a lawsuit claiming that her freedom of religion had been violated by the deprogramming attempt, and that she had been denied due process as a member of a hated class.

Satanic captivity narratives Edit

Among anti-cult captivity narratives, a subgenre is the Satanic Ritual Abuse story, the best-known example being Michelle Remembers.[36] In this type of narrative, a person claims to have developed a new awareness of previously unreported ritual abuse as a result of some form of therapy which purports to recover repressed memories, often using suggestive techniques.

Michelle Remembers represents the cult survivor tale at its most extreme. In it, Michelle Smith recounts horrific tales of sexual and physical abuse at the hands of the "Church of Satan" over a five-year interval. However, the book has been extensively debunked, and is now considered most notable for its role in contributing to the Satanic Ritual Abuse scare of the 1980s, which culminated in the McMartin preschool trial.

Children's novels inspired by captivity narratives Edit

Captivity narratives, in addition to appealing to adults, have been attracting today's children as well. The narratives' exciting nature and their resilient young protagonists make for very educational and entertaining children's novels that have for goal to convey the "American characteristics of resourcefulness, hopefulness, pluck and purity".[37] Elizabeth George Speare published Calico Captive (1957), a historical fiction children's novel inspired by the captivity narrative of Susannah Willard Johnson. In Rewriting the Captivity Narrative for Contemporary Children: Speare, Bruchac, and the French and Indian War (2011), Sara L. Schwebel writes:

Johnson's Narrative vividly describes Susanna Johnson's forty-eight-month ordeal – the terror of being taken captive, childbirth during the forced march, prolonged separation from her three young children, degradation and neglect in a French prison, the loss of a newborn, a battle with smallpox, separation from her husband, and finally, widowhood as her spouse fell in yet another battle in the years-long French and Indian war. Spear borrowed heavily from Johnson's text, lifting both details and dialogue to construct her story. In pitching her tale to young readers, however, she focused not on the Narrative's tale of misfortune but on the youthful optimism of Susanna Johnson's largely imagined younger sister, Miriam.[37]

Conclusions Edit

This article references captivity narratives drawn from literature, history, sociology, religious studies, and modern media. Scholars point to certain unifying factors. Of early Puritan captivity narratives, David L. Minter writes:

First they became instruments of propaganda against Indian "devils" and French "Papists." Later, ... the narratives played an important role in encouraging government protection of frontier settlements. Still later they became pulp thrillers, always gory and sensational, frequently plagiaristic and preposterous.[38]

In its "Terms & Themes" summary of captivity narratives, the University of Houston at Clear Lake suggests that:

In American literature, captivity narratives often relate particularly to the capture of European-American settlers or explorers by Native American Indians, but the captivity narrative is so inherently powerful that the story proves highly adaptable to new contents from terrorist kidnappings to UFO abductions.

  • Anticipates popular fiction, esp. romance narrative: action, blood, suffering, redemption – a page-turner
  • Anticipates or prefigures Gothic literature with depictions of Indian "other" as dark, hellish, cunning, unpredictable
  • Test of ethnic faith or loyalty: Will captive "go native," crossing to the other side, esp. by intermarriage?[39]

The Oxford Companion to United States History indicates that the wave of Catholic immigration after 1820:

provided a large, visible enemy and intensified fears for American institutions and values. These anxieties inspired vicious anti-Catholic propaganda with pornographic overtones, such as Maria Monk's Awful Disclosures[.][40]

Alexandra Heller-Nicholas (quoted earlier) points to the presence of a "helpless" maiden, and a "hero" who rescues her.

Together, these analyses suggest that some of the common elements we may encounter in different types of captivity narratives include:

  • A captor portrayed as quintessentially evil
  • A suffering victim, often female
  • A romantic or sexual encounter occurring in an "alien" culture
  • An heroic rescue, often by a male hero
  • An element of propaganda

Notable captivity narratives Edit

15th–16th centuries Edit

17th century Edit

18th century Edit

  • John Williams (1709), The Redeemed Captive
  • Robert Drury (1729), Madagascar, or Robert Drury's Journal
  • John Gyles (1736), Memoirs of odd adventures, strange deliverances, &c. in the captivity of John Gyles, Esq; commander of the garrison on St. George's River
  • Thomas Pellow (1740), The History of the Long Captivity and Adventures of Thomas Pellow
  • John Peter Salling (1745), The Journal of John Peter Salling
  • Lucy Terry Prince (1746), "Bars Fight"
  • Nehemiah How (1748), A Narrative of the Captivity of Nehemiah How in 1745-1747
  • Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger (1759), The Narrative of Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger, for Three Years Captives Among the Indians[41]
  • Jean Lowry (1760), "A Journal of the Captivity of Jean Lowry and Her Children, Giving an Account of her being taken by the Indians, the 1st of April 1756, from William McCord's, in Rocky-Spring Settlement in Pennsylvania, With an Account of the Hardships she Suffered, &c."[42]
  • Ethan Allen (1779), A narrative of Colonel Ethan Allen's captivity, from the time of his being taken by the British, near Montreal, on the 25th day of September, in the year 1775, to the time of his exchange, on the 6th day of May, 1778 : containing voyages and travels ... Interspersed with some political observations
  • William Walton (1784), The Captivity of Benjamin Gilbert and His Family, 1780–83
  • Mercy Harbison (1792), The Capture and Escape of Mercy Harbison, 1792
  • Arthur Bradman (1794), A narrative of the extraordinary sufferings of Mr. Robert Forbes, his wife, and five children during an unfortunate journey through the wilderness, from Canada to Kennebeck River, in the year 1784, in which three of their children were starved to death
  • Susannah Willard Johnson (1796), A Narrative of the Captivity of Mrs. Johnson, Containing an Account of Her Sufferings During Four Years With the Indians and French
  • Ann Eliza Bleecker (1797), The History of Maria Kittle, novel
  • James Smith (1799), An Account of the Remarkable Occurrences ... in the years 1755, '56, '57, '58 & 59

19th century Edit

  • John R. Jewitt (1803–1805), A Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings of John R. Jewitt, only survivor of the crew of the ship Boston, during a captivity of nearly three years among the savages of Nootka Sound: with an account of the manners, mode of living, and religious opinions of the natives
  • Hugh Gibson (1811), An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson[43]
  • James Riley (1815), Sufferings in Africa
  • Robert Adams (1816), The Narrative of Robert Adams
  • Zadock Steele (1818), The Indian Captive; Or, A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Zadock Steele
  • John Ingles (c. 1824), The Story of Mary Draper Ingles and Son Thomas Ingles
  • Mary Jemison (1824), A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison
  • William Biggs (1826), Narrative of the captivity of William Biggs among the Kickapoo Indians in Illinois in 1788
  • William Lay (1828), A Narrative of the Mutiny, on Board the Ship Globe, of Nantucket, in the Pacific Ocean, Jan. 1824 And the journal of a residence of two years on the Mulgrave Islands; with observations on the manners and customs of the inhabitants
  • John Tanner (1830), A Narrative of the captivity and adventures of John Tanner, thirty years of residence among the Indians, prepared for the press by Edwin James
  • Thomas Andros (1833), The Old Jersey Captive: Or, A Narrative of the Captivity of Thomas Andros...on Board the Old Jersey Prison Ship at New York, 1781
  • Maria Monk (1836), The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk
  • Eliza Fraser (1837), Narrative of the capture, sufferings, and miraculous escape of Mrs. Eliza Fraser
  • Timothy Alden (1837), An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson among the Delaware Indians of the Big Beaver and the Muskingum, from the latter part of July 1756, to the beginning of April, 1759[44]
  • Rachel Plummer (1838), Rachael Plummer's Narrative of Twenty One Months Servitude as a Prisoner Among the Commanchee Indians
  • Sarah Ann Horn with E. House (1839), A Narrative of the Captivity of Mrs. Horn, and Her Two Children, with Mrs. Harris, by the Camanche Indians
  • Herman Melville (1847), Omoo: A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas
  • Christophorus Castanis (1851), The Greek Exile; or, A Narrative of the Captivity and Escape of Christophorus Plato Castanis, During the Massacre on the Island of Scio, by the Turks, Together with Various Adventures in Greece and America
  • Matthew Brayton (1860), The Indian Captive A Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings of Matthew Brayton in His Thirty-Four Years of Captivity Among the Indians of North-Western America
  • Mary Butler Renville (1863), A Thrilling Narrative of Indian Captivity
  • Sarah F. Wakefield (1864), Six Weeks in the Sioux Tepees
  • John McCullough (1876), The Captivity of John McCullough,[45] originally published as A narrative of the captivity of John McCullough, ESQ, in 1832[46]
  • James Smith (1876), The Remarkable Adventures of Col. James Smith, Five Years a Captive Among Indians[45]
  • Gardner, Abbie (1885). History of the Spirit Lake massacre and captivity of Miss Abbie Gardner. Des Moines: Iowa Print. Co.
  • Pote, William (1896). The Journal of Captain William Pote, Jr., during his Captivity in the French and Indian War from May, 1745, to August, 1747. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company.

20th century Edit

Artistic adaptations Edit

In film Edit

In music Edit

  • Cello-rock band Rasputina parodied captivity narratives in their song "My Captivity by Savages", from their album Frustration Plantation (2004).
  • Voltaire's song "Cannibal Buffet", from the album Ooky Spooky (2007), is a humorous take on captivity narratives.

In poetry Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Neal Salisbury. "Review of Colin Caolloway, 'North Country Captives: Selected Narratives of Indian Captivities'", American Indian Quarterly, 1994. vol. 18 (1). p. 97
  2. ^ Joseph Laycock, "Where Do They Get These Ideas? Changing Ideas of Cults in the Mirror of Popular Culture", Journal of the American Academy of Religion, March 2013, Vol. 81, No. 1, pp. 80–106. Note: Laycock refers to an episode of the animated series King of the Hill, in which young women captured by a "cult" and subjected to a low-protein diet are rescued Texas-style: An open air beef barbecue is held outside the "cult" compound. When the women smell the steaks, and are fed bite-sized morsels, they are instantly rescued from their "brainwashed" state, and return to cultural normality. Laycock's work shows how anti-cult captivity narratives – whether real or fictional, dramatic or comedic – remain a staple of modern media.
  3. ^ Introduction, Women's Indian Captivity Narratives, p. xv (New York: Penguin, 1998)
  4. ^ Vaughan, Alden T., and Daniel K. Richter. "Crossing the Cultural Divide:Indians and New Englanders, 1605–1763." Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 90 (1980): pp. 53, 23–99.
  5. ^ White, Lonnie J. "White Women Captives of Southern Plains Indians, 1866–1875", Journal of the West 8 (1969): 327–54
  6. ^ The Cambridge History of English and American Literature. Volume XV. Colonial and Revolutionary Literature, Early National Literature, Part I, Travellers and Explorers, 1583–1763. 11. Jonathan Dickinson.] URL retrieved 24 March 2010
  7. ^ Gardner, Jared (2000). Master Plots: Race and the Founding of an American Literature, 1787–1845. Baltimore: JHU Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-8018-6538-7.
  8. ^ Armstrong, Nancy; Leonard Tennenhouse (1992). The Imaginary Puritan:Literature, Intellectual Labor, and the Origins of Personal Life. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 201. ISBN 0-520-07756-3.
  9. ^ a b Metcalf, Richard (1998). Lamar, Howard (ed.). The New Encyclopedia of the American West. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300070880.
  10. ^ Haefeli and Sweeney, p. 273
  11. ^ Eight captivity narrative. 1746
  12. ^ Burt, Daniel S. (2004-01-13). The Chronology of American Literature: America's literary achievements from the colonial era to modern times. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-618-16821-7. Retrieved 7 September 2010.
  13. ^ The Journal of Captain William Pote, Jr.
  14. ^ "The history of the life and sufferings of Henry Grace, of Basingstoke in the county of Southampton. Being a narrative of the hardships he underwent during several years captivity among the savages in North America, ... Written by himself". 1765.
  15. ^ Collection de documents inédits sur le Canada et l'Amérique [microforme]. 1889. ISBN 9780665053238.
  16. ^ Brian C. Cuthbertson, ed., The Journal of the Reverend John Payzant (1749–1834), (Hantsport, NS: Lancelot Press, 1981), pp. 15-16.
  17. ^ Linda G. Layton, A Passion for Survival: The True Story of Marie Anne and Louis Payzant in Eighteenth-century Nova Scotia. (Halifax, NS: Nimbus Publishing, 2003, 2011), pp. 49-84.
  18. ^ John Witherspoon, Journal of John Witherspoon, Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society, Vol 2, pp. 31–62.
  19. ^ Smethurst, Gamaliel (1774). Ganong, William Francis (ed.). 'A narrative of an extraordinary escape: out of the hands of the Indians, in the Gulph of St. Lawrence. New Brunswick Historical Society.
  20. ^ A Journal of Lieut. Simon Stevens, from the time of his being taken, near Fort William-Henry, June the 25th 1758. With an account of his escape from Quebec, and his arrival at Louisbourg, on June the 6th, 1759.
  21. ^ "Captain Robert Stobo (Concluded)", ed. George M. Kahrl, The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography Vol. 49, No. 3 (Jul., 1941), pp. 254–268
  22. ^ Loescher, Burt Garfield (1969). The History of Rogers' Rangers: The First Green Berets. San Mateo, California. p. 33.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  23. ^ Tousignant, Pierre; Dionne-Tousignant, Madeleine (1979). "du Calvet, Pierre". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IV (1771–1800) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  24. ^ "Documentary history of the state of Maine ." Portland.
  25. ^ Gardner, Brian (1968). The Quest for Timbuctoo. London: Cassell & Company. p. 27.
  26. ^ Adams, Charles Hansford (2006). The Narrative of Robert Adams: A Barbary Captive. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. xlv–xlvi. ISBN 978-0-521-60373-7.
  27. ^ Seaver, James E. (2015). A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison. Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-4891-5.
  28. ^ See Bodi, Anna E., "Patty Hearst: A Media Heiress Caught in Media Spectacle" (2013). CMC Senior Theses. Paper 639, for a more comprehensive and nuanced look at the Patty Hearst phenomenon than is found in most individual articles. Bodi repeatedly poses the dialectic between free choice and agency.
  29. ^ University of Pennsylvania
  30. ^ Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, Rape-Revenge Films: A Critical Study New York: McFarland, p. 70
  31. ^ David G. Bromley, "The Social Construction of Contested Exit Roles", in The Politics of Religious Apostasy, p.37
  32. ^ See J. Gordon Melton, "Brainwashing and Cults: The Rise and Fall of a Theory"
  33. ^ See Eileen Barker, "The Scientific Study of Religion? You must be joking!" Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion Vol. 34, No. 3 (Sep., 1995), pp. 287–310.
  34. ^ See Heyrman, Christine Leigh. "Native American Religion in Early America". Divining America, TeacherServe®. National Humanities Center. Accessed Oct-16-2015.
  35. ^ Janis Johnson, "Deprogram", The Washington Post, May 21, 1977.
  36. ^ See "Satanic Ritual Abuse" in The Encyclopedia of Cults, Sects, and New Religions edited by James R. Lewis, p.636
  37. ^ a b Schwebel, Sara (June 2011). "Rewriting the Captivity Narrative for Contemporary Children: Speare, Bruchac, and the French and Indian War". The New England Quarterly. 84 (2): 318–346. doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00091. JSTOR 23054805. S2CID 57570772.
  38. ^ Minter, David L. "By Dens of Lions: Notes on Stylization in Early Puritan Captivity Narratives" in American Literature, Vol. 45, No. 3 (Nov., 1973), pp. 335–347, Abstract.
  39. ^ University of Houston at Clear Lake, "Terms & Themes: Captivity Narrative," visited Oct-20-2015.
  40. ^ "Anti-Catholic Movement" in The Oxford Companion To United States History, p. 40.
  41. ^ Le Roy, Marie; Leininger, Barbara (1759). The Narrative of Marie le Roy and Barbara Leininger, for Three Years Captives Among the Indians. Translated by Rev. Edmund de Schweinitz. The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography – via The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography volume 29, 1905.
  42. ^ Jean Lowry, "A Journal of the Captivity of Jean Lowry and Her Children, Giving an Account of her being taken by the Indians, the 1st of April 1756, from William McCord's, in Rocky-Spring Settlement in Pennsylvania, With an Account of the Hardships she Suffered, &c." Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford, 2014
  43. ^ "An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson," in Archibald Loudoun, A Selection of Some of the Most Interesting Narratives, of Outrages, Committed by the Indians, in Their Wars with the White People, A. Loudoun Press, Carlisle, 1811; pp. 181-186
  44. ^ Timothy Alden, "An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson among the Delaware Indians of the Big Beaver and the Muskingum, from the latter part of July 1756, to the beginning of April, 1759," Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1837
  45. ^ a b Charles McKnight, Our Western Border, Its Life, Combats, Adventures, Forays, Massacres, Captivities, Scouts, Red Chiefs, Pioneer Women, One Hundred Years Ago. Philadelphia: J.C. McCurdy, 1876; pp 204-224
  46. ^ John McCullough, A narrative of the captivity of John McCullough, ESQ, 1832
  47. ^ Hilary Holladay, Poetry Foundation, retrieved 30 April 2017
  48. ^ R. F. Foster, W. B. Yeats: a Life, Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0-19-288085-3 pages 56, 75-76
  49. ^ Richard J Finneran (ed) Yeats: An Annual of Critical and Textual Studies XII, 1994 ISBN 0-472-10614-7 pages 91–92

Other sources Edit

  • Baepler, Paul, ed. (1999). White Slaves, African Masters: An Anthology of American Barbary Captivity Narratives. The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-03403-4.
  • Alice Baker. True stories of New England captives carried to Canada during the old French and Indian wars. 1897
  • Coleman, Emma Lewis. New England Captives Carried to Canada between 1677 and 1760 during the French and Indian War, 1925.
  • Tragedies of the wilderness, or True and authentic narratives of captives ... By Samuel Gardner Drake
  • "Women Captives and Indian Captivity Narratives" 2005-12-21 at the Wayback Machine, Women's History – accessed January 6, 2006
  • Community and Conflict: Captivity Narratives and Cross-Border Contact in the Seventeenth Century – accessed January 6, 2006[dead link]
  • Strong, Pauline Turner (2002) "Transforming Outsiders: Captivity, Adoption, and Slavery Reconsidered", in A Companion to American Indian History, pp. 339–356. Ed. Philip J. Deloria and Neal Salisbury. Malden, Massachusetts and Oxford, U.K.: Blackwell Publishers.
  • Turner, Frederick. Beyond Geography: The Western Spirit Against the Wilderness, New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University, first edition 1980, reprint, 1992.
  • Journal of John Witherspoon, Annapolis Royal

External links Edit

  • Early American Captivity Narratives, Washington State University
  • The Narrative of Robert Adams at the Internet Archive

captivity, narrative, examples, perspective, this, english, literature, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, english, literature, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, english, literature, appropriate, june, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, templa. The examples and perspective in this English literature may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this English literature discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new English literature as appropriate June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Captivity narratives are usually stories of people captured by enemies whom they consider uncivilized or whose beliefs and customs they oppose The best known captivity narratives in North America are those concerning Europeans and Americans taken as captives and held by the indigenous peoples of North America These narratives have had an enduring place in literature history ethnography and the study of Native peoples The Abduction of Daniel Boone s Daughter by the Indians Charles Ferdinand Wimar 1853They were preceded among English speaking peoples by publication of captivity narratives related to English people taken captive and held by Barbary pirates or sold for ransom or slavery Others were taken captive in the Middle East These accounts established some of the major elements of the form often putting it within a religious framework and crediting God or Providence for gaining freedom or salvation Following the North American experience additional accounts were written after British people were captured during exploration and settlement in India and East Asia Since the late 20th century captivity narratives have also been studied as accounts of persons leaving or held in contemporary religious cults or movements thanks to scholars of religion like David G Bromley and James R Lewis Traditionally historians have made limited use of many captivity narratives They regarded the genre with suspicion because of its ideological underpinnings As a result of new scholarly approaches since the late 20th century historians with a more certain grasp of Native American cultures are distinguishing between plausible statements of fact and value laden judgments in order to study the narratives as rare sources from inside Native societies 1 In addition modern historians such as Linda Colley and anthropologists such as Pauline Turner Strong have also found the North American narratives useful in analyzing how the colonists or settlers constructed the other They also assess these works for what the narratives reveal about the settlers sense of themselves and their culture and the experience of crossing the line to another Colley has studied the long history of English captivity among other cultures both the Barbary pirate captives who preceded those in North America and British captives in cultures such as India or East Asia which began after the early North American experience Certain North American captivity narratives related to being held among Native peoples were published from the 18th through the 19th centuries They reflected an already well established genre in English literature which some colonists would likely have been familiar with There had already been numerous English accounts of captivity by Barbary pirates Other types of captivity narratives such as those recounted by apostates from religious movements i e cult survivor tales have remained an enduring topic in modern media They have been published in books and periodicals in addition to being the subjects of film and television programs both fiction and non fiction 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Origins of narratives 2 1 New England and the Southern colonies 2 2 Nova Scotia and Acadia 2 3 North Africa 3 Types 3 1 Assimilated captives 3 2 Anti cult captivity narratives 3 3 Satanic captivity narratives 3 4 Children s novels inspired by captivity narratives 4 Conclusions 5 Notable captivity narratives 5 1 15th 16th centuries 5 2 17th century 5 3 18th century 5 4 19th century 5 5 20th century 6 Artistic adaptations 6 1 In film 6 2 In music 6 3 In poetry 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Other sources 8 External linksBackground Edit nbsp Elisa Bravo Jaramillo by Raymond MonvoisinBecause of the competition between New France and New England in North America raiding between the colonies was frequent Colonists in New England were frequently taken captive by Canadiens and their Indian allies similarly the New Englanders and their Indian allies took Canadiens and Indian prisoners captive According to Kathryn Derounian Stodola statistics on the number of captives taken from the 15th through the 19th centuries are imprecise and unreliable since record keeping was not consistent and the fate of hostages who disappeared or died was often not known 3 Yet conservative estimates run into the thousands and a more realistic figure may well be higher Between King Philip s War 1675 and the last of the French and Indian Wars 1763 approximately 1 641 New Englanders were taken hostage 4 During the decades long struggle between whites and Plains Indians in the mid 19th century hundreds of women and children were captured 5 Many narratives included a theme of redemption by faith in the face of the threats and temptations of an alien way of life Barbary captivity narratives accounts of English people captured and held by Barbary pirates were popular in England in the 16th and 17th centuries The first Barbary captivity narrative by a resident of North America was that of Abraham Browne 1655 The most popular was that of Captain James Riley entitled An Authentic Narrative of the Loss of the Brig Commerce 1817 citation needed Jonathan Dickinson s Journal God s Protecting Providence 1699 is an account by a Quaker of shipwreck survivors captured by Indians in Florida He says they survived by placing their trust in God to protect them The Cambridge History of English and American Literature describes it as in many respects the best of all the captivity tracts 6 Ann Eliza Bleecker s epistolary novel The History of Maria Kittle 1793 is considered the first known captivity novel It set the form for subsequent Indian capture novels 7 Origins of narratives EditNew England and the Southern colonies Edit nbsp Hannah Duston by Junius Brutus StearnsAmerican Indian captivity narratives accounts of men and women of European descent who were captured by Native Americans were popular in both America and Europe from the 17th century until the close of the United States frontier late in the 19th century Mary Rowlandson s memoir A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs Mary Rowlandson 1682 is a classic example of the genre According to Nancy Armstrong and Leonard Tennenhouse Rowlandson s captivity narrative was one of the most popular captivity narratives on both sides of the Atlantic 8 Although the text temporarily fell out of print after 1720 it had a revival of interest in the 1780s Other popular captivity narratives from the late 17th century include Cotton Mather s A Notable Exploit Dux Faemina Facti on the captivity of Hannah Duston as well as his account of Hannah Swarton s captivity 1697 both well known accounts of the capture of women during King William s War and Jonathan Dickinson s God s Protecting Providence 1699 American captivity narratives were usually based on true events but they frequently contained fictional elements as well Some were entirely fictional created because the stories were popular One spurious captivity narrative was The Remarkable Adventures of Jackson Johonnet of Massachusetts Boston 1793 citation needed Another is that of Nelson Lee Captivity in another culture brought into question many aspects of the captives lives Reflecting their religious beliefs the Puritans tended to write narratives that negatively characterized Indians They portrayed the trial of events as a warning from God concerning the state of the Puritans souls and concluded that God was the only hope for redemption Such a religious cast had also been part of the framework of earlier English accounts of captivity by Barbary pirates The numerous conflicts between Anglo American colonists and the French and Native Americans led to the emphasis of Indians cruelty in English language captivity narratives which served to inspire hatred for their enemies 9 page needed In William Flemming s Narrative of the Sufferings 1750 Indian barbarities are blamed on the teachings of Roman Catholic priests 9 page needed During Queen Anne s War French and Abenaki warriors made the Raid on Deerfield in 1704 killing many settlers and taking more than 100 persons captive They were taken on a several hundred mile overland trek to Montreal Many were held there in Canada for an extended period with some captives adopted by First Nations families and others held for ransom In the colonies ransoms were raised by families or communities there was no higher government program to do so The minister John Williams was among those captured and ransomed His account The Redeemed Captive 1707 was widely distributed in the 18th and 19th centuries and continues to be published today Due to his account as well as the high number of captives this raid unlike others of the time was remembered and became an element in the American frontier story 10 During Father Rale s War Indians raided Dover New Hampshire Elizabeth Hanson wrote a captivity narrative after gaining return to her people Susannah Willard Johnson of New Hampshire wrote about her captivity during the French and Indian War the North American front of the Seven Years War In the final 30 years of the 18th century there was a revival of interest in captivity narratives Accounts such as A Narrative of the Capture and Treatment of John Dodge by the English at Detroit 1779 A Surprising Account of the Captivity and Escape of Philip M Donald and Alexander M Leod of Virginia from the Chickkemogga Indians 1786 Abraham Panther s A Very Surprising Narrative of a Young Woman Who Was Discovered in a Rocky Cave 1787 Narrative of the Remarkable Occurrences in the Life of John Blatchford of Cape Ann 1788 and A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Mr Ebenezer Fletcher of Newipswich Who Was Taken Prisoner by the British 1798 provided American reading audiences with new narratives In some accounts British soldiers were the primary antagonists Nova Scotia and Acadia Edit nbsp John Payzant 1749 1834 captive taken at Lunenburg Nova ScotiaSeven captivity narratives are known that were written following capture of colonists by the Mi kmaq and Maliseet tribes in Nova Scotia and Acadia two other prisoners were future Governor Michael Francklin taken 1754 and Lt John Hamilton taken 1749 at the Siege of Grand Pre Whether their captivity experiences were documented is unknown 11 The most well known became that by John Gyles who wrote Memoirs of odd adventures strange deliverances amp c in the captivity of John Gyles Esq commander of the garrison on St George s River 1736 He was captured in the Siege of Pemaquid 1689 He wrote about his torture by the Natives at Meductic village during King William s War His memoirs are regarded as a precursor to the frontier romances of James Fenimore Cooper William Gilmore Simms and Robert Montgomery Bird 12 Merchant William Pote was captured during the siege of Annapolis Royal during King George s War and wrote about his captivity Pote also wrote about being tortured Ritual torture of war captives was common among Native American tribes who used it as a kind of passage 13 Henry Grace was taken captive by the Mi kmaq near Fort Cumberland during Father Le Loutre s War His narrative was entitled The History of the Life and Sufferings of Henry Grace Boston 1764 14 Anthony Casteel was taken in the Attack at Jeddore during the same war and also wrote an account of his experience 15 The fifth captivity narrative by John Payzant recounts his being taken prisoner with his mother and three siblings during the Raid on Lunenburg 1756 by the First Nations Maliseet Wolastoqiyik in the French and Indian War 16 On route to Quebec John and his siblings were adopted by the First Nations in present day New Brunswick but were reunited with their mother in Quebec about seven months later In the spring of 1760 after the British victory at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759 the family sailed back to Nova Scotia 17 In a separate event John Witherspoon was captured at Annapolis Royal during the French and Indian War and wrote about his experience 18 During the war Gamaliel Smethurst was captured he published an account in 1774 19 Lt Simon Stephens of John Stark s ranger company and Captain Robert Stobo escaped together from Quebec along the coast of Acadia finally reaching British controlled Louisbourg and wrote accounts 20 21 During the Petitcodiac River Campaign the Acadian militia took prisoner William Caesar McCormick of William Stark s rangers and his detachment of three rangers and two light infantry privates from the 35th The Acadian militia took the prisoners to Miramachi and then Restogouch 22 They were kept by Pierre du Calvet who later released them to Halifax 23 In August 1758 William Merritt was taken captive close to St Georges Thomaston Maine and taken to the Saint John River and later to Quebec 24 North Africa Edit nbsp British captain witnessing the miseries of Christian slaves in Algiers 1815North America was not the only region to produce captivity narratives North African slave narratives were written by white Europeans and Americans who were captured often as a result of shipwrecks and enslaved in North Africa in the 18th and early 19th centuries If the Europeans converted to Islam and adopted North Africa as their home they could often end their slavery status but such actions disqualified them from being ransomed to freedom by European consuls in Africa who were qualified only to free captives who had remained Christians 25 About 20 000 British and Irish captives were held in North Africa from the beginning of the 17th century to the middle of the 18th and roughly 700 Americans were held captive as North African slaves between 1785 and 1815 The British captives produced 15 full biographical accounts of their experiences and the American captives produced more than 100 editions of 40 full length narratives 26 Types EditAssimilated captives Edit This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In his book Beyond Geography The Western Spirit Against the Wilderness 1980 Frederick W Turner discusses the effect of those accounts in which white captives came to prefer and eventually adopt a Native American way of life they challenged European American assumptions about the superiority of their culture During some occasions of prisoner exchanges the white captives had to be forced to return to their original cultures Children who had assimilated to new families found it extremely painful to be torn from them after several years captivity Numerous adult and young captives who had assimilated chose to stay with Native Americans and never returned to live in Anglo American or European communities The story of Mary Jemison who was captured as a young girl 1755 and spent the remainder of her 90 years among the Seneca is such an example 27 Where The Spirit Lives a 1989 film written by Keith Leckie and directed by Bruce Pittman turns the tables on the familiar white captive aboriginal captors narrative It sensitively portrays the plight of Canadian aboriginal children who were captured and sent to residential schools where they were stripped of their Native identity and forced to conform to Eurocentric customs and beliefs The story of Patty Hearst which unfolded primarily in the mid 1970s represents a special case She was initially captured by a domestic U S terror group called the Symbionese Liberation Army in February 1974 About a year later she was photographed wielding a machine gun helping them rob a bank Was she an assimilated captive or was she only cooperating as a matter of survival Was she brainwashed or fully conscious acting with free will These questions were hotly debated at the time 28 Anti cult captivity narratives Edit Out of thousands of religious groups a handful have become associated with acts of violence This includes the Peoples Temple founded by Jim Jones in 1955 which ended in a murder suicide claiming the lives of 918 people in November 1978 in Guyana see main article Peoples Temple Members of the Peoples Temple who did not die in the murder suicide are examples of cult survivors and the cult survivor meme has become a popular one A recent American sitcom Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is premised on the notion of cult survivor as a social identity It is not unusual for anyone who grew up in a religious and culturally conservative household and who later adopted secular mainstream values to describe themselves as a cult survivor notwithstanding the absence of any abuse or violence In this sense cult survivor may be used as a polemical term in connection with the so called culture war Not all anti cult captivity narratives describe physical capture Sometimes the capture is a metaphor as is the escape or rescue The captive may be someone who claims to have been seduced or recruited into a religious lifestyle which he she retrospectively describes as one of slavery The term captive may nonetheless be used figuratively Some captivity narratives are partly or even wholly fictional but are meant to impart a strong moral lesson such as the purported dangers of conversion to a minority faith Perhaps the most notorious work in this subgenre is The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk 29 a fictional work circulated during the 19th century and beyond and used to stoke anti Catholic sentiment in the U S see main article Maria Monk She claimed to have been born into a Protestant family but was exposed to Roman Catholicism by attending a convent school She subsequently resolved to become a Catholic nun but upon admission to the order at the Hotel Dieu nunnery in Montreal was soon made privy to its dark secrets the nuns were required to service the priests sexually and the children born of such liaisons were murdered and buried in a mass grave on the building s premises Though the Maria Monk work has been exposed as a hoax it typifies those captivity narratives which depict a minority religion as not just theologically incorrect but fundamentally abusive In Rape Revenge Films A Critical Study Alexandra Heller Nicholas writes The basic structure of the captivity narrative concerns the rescue of helpless maidens who have been kidnapped by natives They are rescued at the last possible moment by a hero Commonly this hero is rewarded through marriage For James R Lewis the nineteenth century captivity narrative was intended to either entertain or titillate audiences or to function as propaganda 30 Like James R Lewis David G Bromley is a scholar of religion who draws parallels between the propaganda function of 19th century captivity narratives concerning Native peoples and contemporary captivity narratives concerning new religious movements Bromley notes that apostates from such movements frequently cast their accounts in the form of captivity narratives This in turn provides justification for anti cult groups to target religious movements for social control measures like deprogramming In The Politics of Religious Apostasy Bromley writes T here is considerable pressure on individuals exiting Subversive organizations to negotiate a narrative with the oppositional coalition that offers an acceptable explanation for participation in the organization and for now once again reversing loyalties In the limiting case exiting members without any personal grievance against the organization may find that re entry into conventional social networks is contingent on at least nominally affirming such opposition coalition claims The archetypal account that is negotiated is a captivity narrative in which apostates assert that they were innocently or naively operating in what they had every reason to believe was a normal secure social site were subjected to overpowering subversive techniques endured a period of subjugation during which they experienced tribulation and humiliation ultimately effected escape or rescue from the organization and subsequently renounced their former loyalties and issued a public warning of the dangers of the former organization as a matter of civic responsibility Any expressions of ambivalence or residual attraction to the former organization are vigorously resisted and are taken as evidence of untrustworthiness Emphasis on the irresistibility of subversive techniques is vital to apostates and their allies as a means of locating responsibility for participation on the organization rather than on the former member 31 Cult survivor tales have become a familiar genre They employ the devices of the captivity narrative in dramatic fashion typically pitting mainstream secular values against the values held by some spiritual minority which may be caricatured As is true of the broader category anti cult captivity narratives are sometimes regarded with suspicion due to their ideological underpinnings their formulaic character and their utility in justifying social control measures In addition critics of the genre tend to reject the mind control thesis and to observe that it is extremely rare in Western nations for religious or spiritual groups to hold anyone physically captive 32 Like captivity narratives in general anti cult captivity narratives also raise contextual concerns Ethnohistoric Native American culture differs markedly from Western European culture Each may have its merits within its own context Modern theorists question the fairness of pitting one culture against another and making broad value judgments Similarly spiritual groups may adopt a different way of life than the secular majority but that way of life may have merits within its own context Spiritual beliefs rituals and customs are not necessarily inferior simply because they differ from the secular mainstream Anti cult captivity narratives which attempt to equate difference with abuse or to invoke a victim paradigm may sometimes be criticized as unfair by scholars who believe that research into religious movements should be context based and value free 33 Beliefs rituals and customs which we assumed were merely primitive or strange may turn out to have profound meaning when examined in their own context 34 Just as Where the Spirit Lives may be viewed as a reverse captivity narrative concerning Native peoples the story of Donna Seidenberg Bavis as recounted in The Washington Post 35 may be viewed as a reverse captivity narrative concerning new religious movements The typical contemporary anti cult captivity narrative is one in which a purported victim of cult mind control is rescued from a life of slavery by some form of deprogramming or exit counseling However Donna Seidenberg Bavis was a Hare Krishna devotee member of ISKCON who according to a lawsuit filed on her behalf by the American Civil Liberties Union was abducted by deprogrammers in February 1977 and held captive for 33 days During that time she was subjected to abusive treatment in an effort to deprogram her of her religious beliefs She escaped her captors by pretending to cooperate then returned to the Krishna temple in Potomac Maryland She subsequently filed a lawsuit claiming that her freedom of religion had been violated by the deprogramming attempt and that she had been denied due process as a member of a hated class Satanic captivity narratives Edit Among anti cult captivity narratives a subgenre is the Satanic Ritual Abuse story the best known example being Michelle Remembers 36 In this type of narrative a person claims to have developed a new awareness of previously unreported ritual abuse as a result of some form of therapy which purports to recover repressed memories often using suggestive techniques Michelle Remembers represents the cult survivor tale at its most extreme In it Michelle Smith recounts horrific tales of sexual and physical abuse at the hands of the Church of Satan over a five year interval However the book has been extensively debunked and is now considered most notable for its role in contributing to the Satanic Ritual Abuse scare of the 1980s which culminated in the McMartin preschool trial Children s novels inspired by captivity narratives EditCaptivity narratives in addition to appealing to adults have been attracting today s children as well The narratives exciting nature and their resilient young protagonists make for very educational and entertaining children s novels that have for goal to convey the American characteristics of resourcefulness hopefulness pluck and purity 37 Elizabeth George Speare published Calico Captive 1957 a historical fiction children s novel inspired by the captivity narrative of Susannah Willard Johnson In Rewriting the Captivity Narrative for Contemporary Children Speare Bruchac and the French and Indian War 2011 Sara L Schwebel writes Johnson s Narrative vividly describes Susanna Johnson s forty eight month ordeal the terror of being taken captive childbirth during the forced march prolonged separation from her three young children degradation and neglect in a French prison the loss of a newborn a battle with smallpox separation from her husband and finally widowhood as her spouse fell in yet another battle in the years long French and Indian war Spear borrowed heavily from Johnson s text lifting both details and dialogue to construct her story In pitching her tale to young readers however she focused not on the Narrative s tale of misfortune but on the youthful optimism of Susanna Johnson s largely imagined younger sister Miriam 37 Conclusions EditThis article references captivity narratives drawn from literature history sociology religious studies and modern media Scholars point to certain unifying factors Of early Puritan captivity narratives David L Minter writes First they became instruments of propaganda against Indian devils and French Papists Later the narratives played an important role in encouraging government protection of frontier settlements Still later they became pulp thrillers always gory and sensational frequently plagiaristic and preposterous 38 In its Terms amp Themes summary of captivity narratives the University of Houston at Clear Lake suggests that In American literature captivity narratives often relate particularly to the capture of European American settlers or explorers by Native American Indians but the captivity narrative is so inherently powerful that the story proves highly adaptable to new contents from terrorist kidnappings to UFO abductions Anticipates popular fiction esp romance narrative action blood suffering redemption a page turner Anticipates or prefigures Gothic literature with depictions of Indian other as dark hellish cunning unpredictable Test of ethnic faith or loyalty Will captive go native crossing to the other side esp by intermarriage 39 The Oxford Companion to United States History indicates that the wave of Catholic immigration after 1820 provided a large visible enemy and intensified fears for American institutions and values These anxieties inspired vicious anti Catholic propaganda with pornographic overtones such as Maria Monk s Awful Disclosures 40 Alexandra Heller Nicholas quoted earlier points to the presence of a helpless maiden and a hero who rescues her Together these analyses suggest that some of the common elements we may encounter in different types of captivity narratives include A captor portrayed as quintessentially evil A suffering victim often female A romantic or sexual encounter occurring in an alien culture An heroic rescue often by a male hero An element of propagandaNotable captivity narratives Edit15th 16th centuries Edit Johann Schiltberger 1460 Reisebuch Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca 1542 La Relacion The Report Translated as The Narrative of Cabeza De Vaca by Rolena Adorno and Patrick Charles Pautz Hans Staden 1557 True Story and Description of a Country of Wild Naked Grim Man eating People in the New World America Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda 1575 Memoir On the Country and Ancient Indian Tribes Of Florida17th century Edit Gentleman of Elvas 1609 Narrative of the captivity of Juan Ortiz a Spaniard Who Was Eleven Years a Prisoner Among the Indians of Florida Fernao Mendes Pinto 1614 Pilgrimage Anthony Knivet 1625 The Admirable Adventures and Strange Fortunes of Master Antonie Knivet olafur Egilsson c 1628 1639 1852 Litil saga umm herhlaup Tyrkjans a Islandi arid 1627 Robert Knox 1659 1678 An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon Hendrick Hamel 1668 Hamel s Journal and a Description of the Kingdom of Korea 1653 1666 Francisco Nunez de Pineda y Bascunan 1673 Cautiverio feliz y razon individual de las guerras dilatadas del reino de Chile Happy Captivity and Reason for the Prolonged Wars of the Kingdom of Chile Mary Rowlandson 1682 The Sovereignty and Goodness of God Cotton Mather 1697 A Notable Exploit Dux Faemina Facti the captivity of Hannah Duston and A Narrative of Hannah Swarton Containing Wonderful Passages relating to her Captivity and her Deliverance both published in Magnalia Christi Americana 18th century Edit John Williams 1709 The Redeemed Captive Robert Drury 1729 Madagascar or Robert Drury s Journal John Gyles 1736 Memoirs of odd adventures strange deliverances amp c in the captivity of John Gyles Esq commander of the garrison on St George s River Thomas Pellow 1740 The History of the Long Captivity and Adventures of Thomas Pellow John Peter Salling 1745 The Journal of John Peter Salling Lucy Terry Prince 1746 Bars Fight Nehemiah How 1748 A Narrative of the Captivity of Nehemiah How in 1745 1747 Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger 1759 The Narrative of Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger for Three Years Captives Among the Indians 41 Jean Lowry 1760 A Journal of the Captivity of Jean Lowry and Her Children Giving an Account of her being taken by the Indians the 1st of April 1756 from William McCord s in Rocky Spring Settlement in Pennsylvania With an Account of the Hardships she Suffered amp c 42 Ethan Allen 1779 A narrative of Colonel Ethan Allen s captivity from the time of his being taken by the British near Montreal on the 25th day of September in the year 1775 to the time of his exchange on the 6th day of May 1778 containing voyages and travels Interspersed with some political observations William Walton 1784 The Captivity of Benjamin Gilbert and His Family 1780 83 Mercy Harbison 1792 The Capture and Escape of Mercy Harbison 1792 Arthur Bradman 1794 A narrative of the extraordinary sufferings of Mr Robert Forbes his wife and five children during an unfortunate journey through the wilderness from Canada to Kennebeck River in the year 1784 in which three of their children were starved to death Susannah Willard Johnson 1796 A Narrative of the Captivity of Mrs Johnson Containing an Account of Her Sufferings During Four Years With the Indians and French Ann Eliza Bleecker 1797 The History of Maria Kittle novel James Smith 1799 An Account of the Remarkable Occurrences in the years 1755 56 57 58 amp 5919th century Edit John R Jewitt 1803 1805 A Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings of John R Jewitt only survivor of the crew of the ship Boston during a captivity of nearly three years among the savages of Nootka Sound with an account of the manners mode of living and religious opinions of the natives Hugh Gibson 1811 An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson 43 James Riley 1815 Sufferings in Africa Robert Adams 1816 The Narrative of Robert Adams Zadock Steele 1818 The Indian Captive Or A Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of Zadock Steele John Ingles c 1824 The Story of Mary Draper Ingles and Son Thomas Ingles Mary Jemison 1824 A Narrative of the Life of Mrs Mary Jemison William Biggs 1826 Narrative of the captivity of William Biggs among the Kickapoo Indians in Illinois in 1788 William Lay 1828 A Narrative of the Mutiny on Board the ShipGlobe of Nantucket in the Pacific Ocean Jan 1824 And the journal of a residence of two years on the Mulgrave Islands with observations on the manners and customs of the inhabitants John Tanner 1830 A Narrative of the captivity and adventures of John Tanner thirty years of residence among the Indians prepared for the press by Edwin James Thomas Andros 1833 The Old Jersey Captive Or A Narrative of the Captivity of Thomas Andros on Board the Old Jersey Prison Ship at New York 1781 Maria Monk 1836 The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk Eliza Fraser 1837 Narrative of the capture sufferings and miraculous escape of Mrs Eliza Fraser Timothy Alden 1837 An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson among the Delaware Indians of the Big Beaver and the Muskingum from the latter part of July 1756 to the beginning of April 1759 44 Rachel Plummer 1838 Rachael Plummer s Narrative of Twenty One Months Servitude as a Prisoner Among the Commanchee Indians Sarah Ann Horn with E House 1839 A Narrative of the Captivity of Mrs Horn and Her Two Children with Mrs Harris by the Camanche Indians Herman Melville 1847 Omoo A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas Christophorus Castanis 1851 The Greek Exile or A Narrative of the Captivity and Escape of Christophorus Plato Castanis During the Massacre on the Island of Scio by the Turks Together with Various Adventures in Greece and America Matthew Brayton 1860 The Indian Captive A Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings of Matthew Brayton in His Thirty Four Years of Captivity Among the Indians of North Western America Mary Butler Renville 1863 A Thrilling Narrative of Indian Captivity Sarah F Wakefield 1864 Six Weeks in the Sioux Tepees John McCullough 1876 The Captivity of John McCullough 45 originally published as A narrative of the captivity of John McCullough ESQ in 1832 46 James Smith 1876 The Remarkable Adventures of Col James Smith Five Years a Captive Among Indians 45 Gardner Abbie 1885 History of the Spirit Lake massacre and captivity of Miss Abbie Gardner Des Moines Iowa Print Co Pote William 1896 The Journal of Captain William Pote Jr during his Captivity in the French and Indian War from May 1745 to August 1747 New York Dodd Mead amp Company 20th century Edit Herman Lehmann 1927 Nine Years Among the Indians Helena Valero 1965 Yanoama The Story of Helena Valero a Girl Kidnapped by Amazonian Indians F Bruce Lamb 1971 Wizard of the Upper Amazon The Story of Manuel Cordova Rios Michelle Smith and Lawrence Pazder 1980 Michelle Remembers Patty Hearst and Alvin Moscow 1982 Patty Hearst Her Own Story Terry Waite 1993 Taken on TrustArtistic adaptations EditIn film Edit The Searchers 1956 directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne is a drama about a man s search for his niece who was taken captive by Comanche in the American West The film was primarily about him and his search and was influential because of the multiple psychological layers in the character portrayal citation needed The movie is loosely based on the 1836 kidnapping of nine year old Cynthia Ann Parker by Comanche warriors A Man Called Horse 1970 directed by Elliot Silverstein and starring Richard Harris is a drama about a man captured by the Sioux who is initially enslaved and mocked by being treated as an animal but comes to respect his captors culture and gain their respect It spawned two sequels The Return of a Man Called Horse 1976 and Triumphs of a Man Called Horse 1983 Where The Spirit Lives 1989 written by Keith Leckie directed by Bruce Pittman and starring Michelle St John is a reverse captivity narrative It tells the story of Ashtecome a First Nations Canadian native girl who is kidnapped and sent to a residential missionary school where she is abused In music Edit Cello rock band Rasputina parodied captivity narratives in their song My Captivity by Savages from their album Frustration Plantation 2004 Voltaire s song Cannibal Buffet from the album Ooky Spooky 2007 is a humorous take on captivity narratives In poetry Edit Hilary Holladay s book of poems The Dreams of Mary Rowlandson recreates Rowlandson s capture by Indians in poetic vignettes 47 W B Yeats 1889 The Stolen Child in which a human child is stolen by faeries and indoctrinated into their alien way of life 48 49 References EditCitations Edit Neal Salisbury Review of Colin Caolloway North Country Captives Selected Narratives of Indian Captivities American Indian Quarterly 1994 vol 18 1 p 97 Joseph Laycock Where Do They Get These Ideas Changing Ideas of Cults in the Mirror of Popular Culture Journal of the American Academy of Religion March 2013 Vol 81 No 1 pp 80 106 Note Laycock refers to an episode of the animated series King of the Hill in which young women captured by a cult and subjected to a low protein diet are rescued Texas style An open air beef barbecue is held outside the cult compound When the women smell the steaks and are fed bite sized morsels they are instantly rescued from their brainwashed state and return to cultural normality Laycock s work shows how anti cult captivity narratives whether real or fictional dramatic or comedic remain a staple of modern media Introduction Women s Indian Captivity Narratives p xv New York Penguin 1998 Vaughan Alden T and Daniel K Richter Crossing the Cultural Divide Indians and New Englanders 1605 1763 Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 90 1980 pp 53 23 99 White Lonnie J White Women Captives of Southern Plains Indians 1866 1875 Journal of the West 8 1969 327 54 The Cambridge History of English and American Literature Volume XV Colonial and Revolutionary Literature Early National Literature Part I Travellers and Explorers 1583 1763 11 Jonathan Dickinson URL retrieved 24 March 2010 Gardner Jared 2000 Master Plots Race and the Founding of an American Literature 1787 1845 Baltimore JHU Press p 35 ISBN 0 8018 6538 7 Armstrong Nancy Leonard Tennenhouse 1992 The Imaginary Puritan Literature Intellectual Labor and the Origins of Personal Life Berkeley University of California Press p 201 ISBN 0 520 07756 3 a b Metcalf Richard 1998 Lamar Howard ed The New Encyclopedia of the American West Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300070880 Haefeli and Sweeney p 273 Eight captivity narrative 1746 Burt Daniel S 2004 01 13 The Chronology of American Literature America s literary achievements from the colonial era to modern times Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 49 ISBN 978 0 618 16821 7 Retrieved 7 September 2010 The Journal of Captain William Pote Jr The history of the life and sufferings of Henry Grace of Basingstoke in the county of Southampton Being a narrative of the hardships he underwent during several years captivity among the savages in North America Written by himself 1765 Collection de documents inedits sur le Canada et l Amerique microforme 1889 ISBN 9780665053238 Brian C Cuthbertson ed The Journal of the Reverend John Payzant 1749 1834 Hantsport NS Lancelot Press 1981 pp 15 16 Linda G Layton A Passion for Survival The True Story of Marie Anne and Louis Payzant in Eighteenth century Nova Scotia Halifax NS Nimbus Publishing 2003 2011 pp 49 84 John Witherspoon Journal of John Witherspoon Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society Vol 2 pp 31 62 Smethurst Gamaliel 1774 Ganong William Francis ed A narrative of an extraordinary escape out of the hands of the Indians in the Gulph of St Lawrence New Brunswick Historical Society A Journal of Lieut Simon Stevens from the time of his being taken near Fort William Henry June the 25th 1758 With an account of his escape from Quebec and his arrival at Louisbourg on June the 6th 1759 Captain Robert Stobo Concluded ed George M Kahrl The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography Vol 49 No 3 Jul 1941 pp 254 268 Loescher Burt Garfield 1969 The History of Rogers Rangers The First Green Berets San Mateo California p 33 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Tousignant Pierre Dionne Tousignant Madeleine 1979 du Calvet Pierre In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IV 1771 1800 online ed University of Toronto Press Documentary history of the state of Maine Portland Gardner Brian 1968 The Quest for Timbuctoo London Cassell amp Company p 27 Adams Charles Hansford 2006 The Narrative of Robert Adams A Barbary Captive New York Cambridge University Press pp xlv xlvi ISBN 978 0 521 60373 7 Seaver James E 2015 A Narrative of the Life of Mrs Mary Jemison Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 4891 5 See Bodi Anna E Patty Hearst A Media Heiress Caught in Media Spectacle 2013 CMC Senior Theses Paper 639 for a more comprehensive and nuanced look at the Patty Hearst phenomenon than is found in most individual articles Bodi repeatedly poses the dialectic between free choice and agency Ruth Hughes on The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk University of Pennsylvania Alexandra Heller Nicholas Rape Revenge Films A Critical Study New York McFarland p 70 David G Bromley The Social Construction of Contested Exit Roles in The Politics of Religious Apostasy p 37 See J Gordon Melton Brainwashing and Cults The Rise and Fall of a Theory See Eileen Barker The Scientific Study of Religion You must be joking Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion Vol 34 No 3 Sep 1995 pp 287 310 See Heyrman Christine Leigh Native American Religion in Early America Divining America TeacherServe National Humanities Center Accessed Oct 16 2015 Janis Johnson Deprogram The Washington Post May 21 1977 See Satanic Ritual Abuse in The Encyclopedia of Cults Sects and New Religions edited by James R Lewis p 636 a b Schwebel Sara June 2011 Rewriting the Captivity Narrative for Contemporary Children Speare Bruchac and the French and Indian War The New England Quarterly 84 2 318 346 doi 10 1162 TNEQ a 00091 JSTOR 23054805 S2CID 57570772 Minter David L By Dens of Lions Notes on Stylization in Early Puritan Captivity Narratives in American Literature Vol 45 No 3 Nov 1973 pp 335 347 Abstract University of Houston at Clear Lake Terms amp Themes Captivity Narrative visited Oct 20 2015 Anti Catholic Movement in The Oxford Companion To United States History p 40 Le Roy Marie Leininger Barbara 1759 The Narrative of Marie le Roy and Barbara Leininger for Three Years Captives Among the Indians Translated by Rev Edmund de Schweinitz The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography via The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography volume 29 1905 Jean Lowry A Journal of the Captivity of Jean Lowry and Her Children Giving an Account of her being taken by the Indians the 1st of April 1756 from William McCord s in Rocky Spring Settlement in Pennsylvania With an Account of the Hardships she Suffered amp c Oxford Text Archive University of Oxford 2014 An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson in Archibald Loudoun A Selection of Some of the Most Interesting Narratives of Outrages Committed by the Indians in Their Wars with the White People A Loudoun Press Carlisle 1811 pp 181 186 Timothy Alden An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson among the Delaware Indians of the Big Beaver and the Muskingum from the latter part of July 1756 to the beginning of April 1759 Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 1837 a b Charles McKnight Our Western Border Its Life Combats Adventures Forays Massacres Captivities Scouts Red Chiefs Pioneer Women One Hundred Years Ago Philadelphia J C McCurdy 1876 pp 204 224 John McCullough A narrative of the captivity of John McCullough ESQ 1832 Hilary Holladay Poetry Foundation retrieved 30 April 2017 R F Foster W B Yeats a Life Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0 19 288085 3 pages 56 75 76 Richard J Finneran ed Yeats An Annual of Critical and Textual Studies XII 1994 ISBN 0 472 10614 7 pages 91 92 Other sources Edit Baepler Paul ed 1999 White Slaves African Masters An Anthology of American Barbary Captivity Narratives The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 03403 4 Alice Baker True stories of New England captives carried to Canada during the old French and Indian wars 1897 Coleman Emma Lewis New England Captives Carried to Canada between 1677 and 1760 during the French and Indian War 1925 Tragedies of the wilderness or True and authentic narratives of captives By Samuel Gardner Drake Women Captives and Indian Captivity Narratives Archived 2005 12 21 at the Wayback Machine Women s History accessed January 6 2006 Community and Conflict Captivity Narratives and Cross Border Contact in the Seventeenth Century accessed January 6 2006 dead link Strong Pauline Turner 2002 Transforming Outsiders Captivity Adoption and Slavery Reconsidered in A Companion to American Indian History pp 339 356 Ed Philip J Deloria and Neal Salisbury Malden Massachusetts and Oxford U K Blackwell Publishers Turner Frederick Beyond Geography The Western Spirit Against the Wilderness New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University first edition 1980 reprint 1992 Journal of John Witherspoon Annapolis RoyalExternal links EditEarly American Captivity Narratives Washington State University The Narrative of Robert Adams at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Captivity narrative amp oldid 1178811751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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