As the first female non-poetical work by Puritan, the captured stories of Mary Rowlandson can be read from various perspectives. This can be regarded as encouragement to other women who follow her to write a story of imprisonment. On the other hand, it can be read in one way, it only strengthens the system of writing that patriarch community. It also highlights the fact that Puritans are God's voters and locals are not pure creatures.
The imprisonment and recovery of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson's wife in Mary Rowlandson's Mary Rowlandson's Prison and Recovery Story by Puritan's mother, Lancaster, Lancaster, Massachusetts, reported that 1676 Indians The aggressive war of the town that remembered the town's invasion war, "When Indians tried to regain their tribal land." She explained the time Indie and the time when she was imprisoned by the terrible environment she lived in. These horrible ... Mary Rolandson : The story of captivity and recovery by Mrs. Mary Rolandson and Mrs. Benjamin Franklin: Each literary story of autobiography has the importance of a great leader or survivor Doubt: Mary Rolandson and Benjamin Franklin The story is about writing their life experiences and adventure stories You learn from, nobody can guarantee the life, life can be short.
Mary Rolandson's "Narration of imprisonment and recovery of captain Mary Rosenson" and Benjamin Franklin's "About the Barbarians of North America" are based on two different perspectives of narrator's unique 'barbarian' experience. Benjamin Franklin's "About the Savage ..." is a way to compare Indians and the UK, and Franklin is not the reason why Franklin should not define Indians as barbarians. "It is a written exam of the brutal trauma experience that women face when they are caught by Indians."
A short story of Mary Rowlandson's "Mary Rowlandson's Captivity and Recovery" is a short history of her personal experiences being imprisoned by the Tampa of Wampanoagu. Meanwhile, Mary Laurenson experienced many difficulties and derogatory encounters. But she succeeded in showing her outstanding position to anyone around her. She clearly shows that the time spent in confinement is often associated with lessons taught in the Bible. Still, colonists may kill
In her book, "Mary-Mary Rolandson's Captivity and Recovery Story", Laurentson wrote about the ways trapped by Native Americans in the war between locals and British settlers There. At first she thought locals were "Rolandson," but her view began to change throughout the book. While being caught she kept moving forward using Puritan's faith. She changed this situation to the will of God, and said she reflected the Puritan religious beliefs rather than to attack others. Her view on the American Indians has changed even for unprecedented things among all the other British settlers. She started thinking that there was no big difference between civilization and barbarians. Because she saw similarities between her people and local people (and I liked some of them as well). She seems to have some kind of knowledge between herself and her religion.