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“Curious Pieces of Divine Work” (22) Hegemonic myth of Puritans (and of us?) Reenactment of Old Testament stories Deliverance from Egypt, crossing the water Theological justification for “promised land” Indians = Canaanites, “filthy,” “lustful,” “heathen” Lifestyles not “English” – loud, vocal, impulsive, communal, combative Some adopted European dress (52) and even religion (“Praying Indians”) Colony land grants specified no western borders Puritan migration continues, settlements expand, Indians resist Some Indians ally with colonists against enemy tribes (21) Indian attacks on colonists seen as divine punishment Society growing more prosperous & secular: “declension”
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Mary Rowlandson (c.1637-1711) Captivity narrative (set in 1675; published 1682) King Philip’s War (1676) – “total war” Collapse of Puritans’ alliance with Narragansetts and Wampanoags (who had helped exterminate the Pequot in 1637) Bands of dispossessed natives commit “terrorism” on settlements Atrocities of colonists add to insult of territorial expansion Colonists respond with all out “war against terror” (against “evil”?) David F. Hawke, Everyday Life in Early America (1988) Biblical references give her experience meaning Not just random terror, but divine plan to test her, community Indians win battles because God helps them Material world “emblem” of spiritual world – preparation for afterlife
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“Blood Sister” to the Narragansetts? Story of her “Americanization” (17) How is she transformed? How no longer “English”? What effect does her captivity – especially her publication of a first-person account – have on the Puritan community? What does it reveal about the actual (not stereotyped or propagandized) relations between Indians and colonists? What is significance of her being a woman captive, a woman author?
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What lies beneath – what is left unsaid...
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Alternate Histories Other possibilities for Indian-colonist coexistence? California, So. America – Spanish introduce outright slavery, but also convert Indians to Catholicism and settle them in missions (feudal system) Powhatan’s speech to John Smith – mutual benefit? Equals? French system – trade, no land grab, even intermarriage Why don’t the English intermarry? Rowlandson’s story read as a parable: Pilgrim’s Progress She isn’t the same afterwards – an “American”? Grew a “new skin”? OT control of sexuality = religious & national identity Indians’ depravity an excuse for genocide (compare Hebrews/Canaan) D.H. Lawrence, Studies in Classic American Literature: Americans must come to terms with its “grinning aboriginal demons” (1923)
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A Great Irony of American History A determined effort by tribal confederation could have driven the colonists back into the sea Extermination of New England tribes almost total Virtually invisible for next 300 years Late 20 th century: revitalized tribes finally striking back Pequots & Narragansetts operate tribal casinos, pay taxes and make donations to State of Connecticut
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