The captive's position : female narrative, male identity, and royal authority in colonial New England
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Bibliographic Information
The captive's position : female narrative, male identity, and royal authority in colonial New England
University of Pennsylvania Press, c2007
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [205]-214) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Why do narratives of Indian captivity emerge in New England between 1682 and 1707 and why are these texts, so centrally concerned with women's experience, supported and even written by a powerful group of Puritan ministers? In The Captive's Position, Teresa Toulouse argues for a new interpretation of the captivity narrative-one that takes into account the profound shifts in political and social authority and legitimacy that occurred in New England at the end of the seventeenth century.
While North American narratives of Indian captivity had been written before this period by French priests and other European adventurers, those stories had focused largely on Catholic conversions and martyrdoms or male strategies for survival among the Indians. In contrast, the New England texts represented a colonial Protestant woman who was separated brutally from her family but who demonstrated qualities of religious acceptance, humility, and obedience until she was eventually returned to her own community. Toulouse explores how the female captive's position came to resonate so powerfully for traditional male elites in the second and third generation of the Massachusetts colony. Threatened by ongoing wars with Indians and French as well as by a range of royal English interventions in New England political and cultural life, figures such as Increase Mather, Cotton Mather, and John Williams perceived themselves to be equally challenged by religious and social conflicts within New England. By responding to and employing popular representations of female captivity, they were enabled to express their ambivalence toward the world of their fathers and toward imperial expansion and thereby to negotiate their own complicated sense of personal and cultural identity.
Examining the captivity narratives of Mary Rowlandson, Hannah Dustan, Hannah Swarton, and John Williams (who comes to stand in for the female captive), Toulouse asserts the need to read these gendered texts as cultural products that variably engage, shape, and confound colonial attitudes toward both Europe and the local scene in Massachusetts. In doing so, The Captive's Position offers a new story of the rise and breakdown of orthodox Puritan captivities and a meditation on the relationship between dreams of authority and historical change.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Female Captivity, Royal Authority, and Male Identity in Colonial New England, 1682-1707
Chapter 2. The Sovereignty and Goodness of God in 1682: Mary Rowlandson's Narrative and the "Fathers'" Defense
Chapter 3. Deference and Difference: Female Captivity and Male Ambivalence
Chapter 4. The Uses of Female Humiliation: Judea Capta, Hannah Dustan, and Hannah Swarton in the 1690s
Chapter 5. Hannah Dustan's Bodies: Domestic Violence and Third-Generation Male Identity in Cotton Mather's Decennium Luctuosum
Chapter 6. Returning to Zion: Cultural Competition and John Williams's The Redeemed Captive
Chapter 7. The Seduction of the "Father(s)"
Coda: Dux Faemina Facta/Dux Faemina Facti
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
by "Nielsen BookData"