Food in Mary Rowlandson's The Sovereignty and Goodness of God
[2023-11-29 19:44:52]
Mary Rolandson's food is God's sovereignty and tenderness, "food is the medium of life, the dynamics of life, the sudden appearance of life, the expression of joy, the expression of pleasure, horror, and history food, more important is life" - anonymous Without food, we can not maintain our lives and culture. At the most basic level, food is fundamentally essential not only for survival but also for growth. Carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, nutrients, calories are taken into the body, and food is a survival mechanism.
God's sovereignty and tenderness are the reasons after Mary Rolanson was arrested in the East American Indian and Metacom War. As the story's voice continues to change its view, the story seems to burst. Changes in Rowlands' opinion, the use of Biblical texts, and her experiences with the Indians defined her as a woman, and her faith shows a model for other people in the Puritan society. Mary Rowlandson 's captive story was used as a propaganda for Puritan religion. It is used to teach the God of the Puritan community to test his followers; in any fight; faith must be maintained to receive rewards. As a Puritan, Laurenson believed that the grace of God and God's intervention formed the events of the world. She and the other Puritans believe that God formed things for a certain purpose. In her story, Laurenson insists that people accept God's will and make full use of God's will.
As Mary Rowlandson and Sarah Kemble Knight have very different beliefs about God, religion is reflected differently in writing. Strict Puritan, whose world is developing around God, Mary Rolanson, her writing takes a theological approach and more than that is a religious belief. On the other hand, Sarah Kemble Knight has religious beliefs, but they are not as common as Puritans. Instead, she takes a hands-on approach to her writing and gives a more realistic story of secular life view. For example, Rolanson is religiously referring to the Bible, but Knight tends to visualize classical literature, for example when referring to the Greek god Apollo, the sun god traverses the sky with a carriage and the sun Subtract. "Now is the glorified master, his fast march came to his stage, let me and the other lower world people spend the poor in the dark, and we immediately surrounded It will be. "