Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Captivity_narrative> ?p ?o }
- Captivity_narrative abstract "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 are those concerning the indigenous peoples of North America. These narratives (and questions about their accuracy) have an enduring place in literature, history, ethnography, and the study of Native peoples. However, captivity narratives have also come to play a major role in the study of contemporary religious movements, thanks to scholars of religion like David G. Bromley and James R. Lewis. In this article, both main types of captivity narratives are considered.Traditionally, historians have made limited use of certain captivity narratives. They have regarded the genre with suspicion because of its ideological underpinnings. As a result of new scholarly approaches, historians with a more certain grasp of Native American cultures are distinguishing between plausible statements of fact and value-laden judgements in order to study the narratives as rare sources from \"inside\" Native societies.Contemporary historians such as Linda Colley and anthropologists such as Pauline Turner Strong have also found the narratives useful in analyzing how the colonists constructed the \"other\", as well as 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 in other cultures, both the Barbary pirate captives who preceded those in North America, and British captives in cultures such as India, after the North American experience.Certain North American captivity narratives involving Native peoples were published from the 18th through the 19th centuries, but they reflected a well-established genre in English literature. There had already been English accounts of captivity by Barbary pirates, or in the Middle East, which established some of the major elements of the form. Following the American experience, additional accounts were written after British people were captured during exploration and settlement in India and East Asia.Other types of captivity narratives, such as those recounted by apostates from religious movements (i.e. \"cult survivor\" tales), have remained an enduring feature of modern media, and currently appear in books, periodicals, film, and television.The unifying factor in most captivity narratives, whether they stem from geopolitical or religious conflicts, is that the captive portrays the captors' way of life as alien, undesirable, and incompatible with the captive's own (typically dominant) culture. This underscores the utility of captivity narratives in garnering support for social control measures, such as removing Native Americans to \"reservations\", or stigmatizing participation in religious movements – whether Catholicism in the nineteenth century, or ISKCON in the twentieth.Captivity narratives tend to be culturally chauvinistic, viewing an \"alien\" culture through the lens of the narrator's preferred culture, thus making (possibly unfair) value judgements like \"Puritans good, Indians bad.\"".
- Captivity_narrative thumbnail Boone_abduction.jpg?width=300.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink narrativeofrober00adamrich.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink books?id=dB4TAAAAYAAJ&redir_esc=y.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=witherspoon&f=false.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink XJ&sdn=classiclit&zu=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bedfordstmartins.com%2Fhistory%2Fmodules%2Fmod02%2Fmain.htm.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink captive.htm.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink aa020920a.htm.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink Nims2.pdf.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink cihm_02485.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageExternalLink cihm_38813.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageID "3637274".
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageLength "47375".
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageOutDegree "214".
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageRevisionID "706845834".
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink 1956_in_film.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink 1970_in_film.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink 1989_in_film.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink A_Man_Called_Horse_(film).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Abraham_Panther.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Acadia.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink American_Civil_Liberties_Union.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Ann_Eliza_Bleecker.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Annapolis_Royal.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Anthony_Casteel.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Anthony_Knivet.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Anthropologist.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Anti-Catholicism_in_the_United_States.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Anti-cult_movement.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Apostasy.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Atrocity_story.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Attack_at_Jeddore.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Barbary_pirates.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Bruce_Pittman.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_folklore.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Captivity_narratives.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Culture_of_Nova_Scotia.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fiction.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Acadia.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Literary_genres.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Military_history_of_Acadia.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Military_history_of_New_Brunswick.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Military_history_of_New_England.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Military_history_of_Nova_Scotia.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Category:Military_history_of_the_Thirteen_Colonies.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Celts.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_Satan.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Comanche.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Cotton_Mather.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Culture_war.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Cynthia_Ann_Parker.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Mail.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink David_G._Bromley.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Deprogramming.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Dover,_New_Hampshire.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Due_process.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Dummers_War.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Elizabeth_Hanson_(captive_of_Native_Americans).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Elliot_Silverstein.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink English_Reformation.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink English_people.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Epistolary_novel.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Fairy.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Father_Le_Loutres_War.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Parker_massacre.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_W._Turner.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Free_will.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Freedom_of_religion.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink French_Canadians.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink French_and_Indian_War.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink French_and_Indian_Wars.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Frontier.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Frustration_Plantation.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Gamaliel_Smethurst.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Guyana.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Hannah_Duston.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Hernando_de_Escalante_Fontaneda.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Hoax.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Indian_reservation.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Indigenous_peoples_of_the_Americas.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink International_Society_for_Krishna_Consciousness.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Internet_Archive.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Jackson_Johonnet.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink James_Fenimore_Cooper.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink James_R._Lewis_(scholar).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink James_Riley_(captain).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink James_Smith_(frontiersman).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Jim_Jones.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Ford.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Gyles.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Hamilton_(British_Army_officer).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Payzant.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_R._Jewitt.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Tanner_(captive).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Wayne.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink John_Williams_(minister).
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Jonathan_Dickinson.
- Captivity_narrative wikiPageWikiLink Jonestown.