Outcasts of Academia Encountering the “Other” in the Poetry of Anne Bradstreet and Phillis Wheatley Anne Bradstreet and Phillis Wheatley were two of America’s early poets‚ who are known for their trailblazing work in American Women’s literature. These women not only published poetry (a rare enough thing in America during the 17th and 18th centuries) but overcame gender and racial difficulties in the process. As a woman writing in 17th century Puritan New England‚ Bradstreet was the pioneer of
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In the beginning William Bradford characterizes nature as a hideous and desolate wilderness‚ full of wild beasts and wild men. Rowlandson echoes Bradford’s feelings‚ referring to the New World as a vast and howling wilderness an often calls nature a desolate place. Just like Rowlandson‚ Edward Taylor seems to have a distaste towards nature. Puritanism becomes more accepting of the natural world and more liberal in its use of nature imagery. Whereas Taylor becomes seemingly more detached and distrustful
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after verse being quoted from the Bible. Some people have many Gods while most have one reining all-powerful being. In the case of Mary Rowlandson‚ I believe her being a puritan and having the strong puritan beliefs made her more suitable for dealing with the trails she was about to face then say a everyday church goer. Being the wife of a preacher it shows in the text Mary was solidly grounded in her faith making and well knowledgeable The Puritan Belief is one that was quite popular in the colonies
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Phillis Wheatly was born in 1753. At the young age of 8‚ Phillis was kidnapped and brought overseas on a slave ship to Boston. John Wheatly then purchased Phillis as a servant for his wife. Phillis was taken under the wing on Susanna‚ John’s wife. Phillis’s intelligence was hard not to recognize. Susanna and her two children taught Phillis to read and write. At this time it was discouraged for blacks to know how to read and write‚ so Phillis had a pretty good life to be able to do not one but both
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This essay summarizes the key aspects of Rowlandson’s captivity story; the reasons behind her captivity; how she juxtaposes the bible and her experiences; the trials and tribulations that she had to confront in the hands of her captors; the type of succor that she received during her moments of crisis; her attitude towards her Native Americans captors; the culture‚ traditions and attitude of the her captors namely the Algokian Indians; the hardships the Indians had to endure at the hands the colonists;
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were brutality beaten by their owners . 1.) Phillis wheatley was the first African American to publish a book ‚ and the first to achieve an international reputation as a writer . Wheatley poetry not only grasp the attention of blacks ‚ but also white readers. Whealtey ’s poetry was stunning news to whites who encountered Poem on Various Subjects ‚ Religious and Moral by Phillis Wheatley ‚ Negro Servant to Mr.John Wheatley of Boston . Before Wheatley ‚ grew the attention of white readers the assumption
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CLOUD PILLOW 1 Cloud Pillow Mountains Robby Carter Melanie Watson ENG121 February 3rd‚ 2013 CLOUD PILLOW 2 Cloud Pillow Mountains My family and I went on a mini road trip to a small town up in the mountains one winter afternoon so that
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The Captive Differences between Rowlandson and Smith There was a time where Native Americans ruled the plains with an iron fist‚ a time where their authority was unmatched by civilized law and when puritans and early settlers alike shook with fear and respect for their Barbaric Neighbors. Why did the Natives show such ferocity? Perhaps the early settlers‚ not only forced their beliefs‚ but forced the natives out of their land as well. Anger‚ anarchy‚ and revelry spread like a plague and in the midst
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the day‚ the ’superior’ whites could no longer ignore the rising clamor of those they claimed possession over. These enslaved people had voices‚ and they were making it known that they knew the white man’s language. One such voice was that of Phillis Wheatley‚ a young African girl turned slave and saved by the generosity of her owners. While not an outspoken advocate of slave rights‚ she was one of the first to hint that African-Americans could be more than just objects used for menial and mindless
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Indeed‚ Phillis Wheatley’s poem‚ “To the University of Cambridge‚ in New England‚” can be seen as a radical movement of that particular time period. It was not seen as proper for an African American slave to address herself‚ with such authority‚ towards white high class. Therefore‚ I believe that Wheatley purposely identified the clear distinction between her race and that of the upper class white members of society. I imagine that one of Wheatley’s drives‚ for sharing this poem‚ consisted of a cautious
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