EssaysForStudent.com - Free Essays, Term Papers & Book Notes
Search

American Literature

By:   •  Essay  •  630 Words  •  March 1, 2010  •  1,021 Views

Page 1 of 3

Join now to read essay American Literature

All of the authors we have conversed about in class and studied about at home are connected in at least one way, if not many more. For example, Anne Bradstreet, Jonathan Edwards, Michael Wigglesworth and John Winthrop all write about God and the way we should all act and the simple fact that we all need to be Christians and so must the Indians who occupy their lives. Where as these authors are writers of the Heavenly Father, the authors that I wish to write about, though they do speak a little about God, I am writing on their influence on the Indian culture as well as the impact the Indians have made in Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca’s, Mary Rowlandson’s and Samson Occom’s lives.

First of all I wish to write about Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca and how he perceived life as he lived with the Indian people and the culture he took in as his own as he lived with them. Cabeza de Vaca thought, I assume, that the Indians were semi-humans compared with he who was fully human because of his undemanding nature and his involvement with the King of England. Cabeza de Vaca calls, in his narratives, the Indians he lives with ‘people’. Thus saying they are human, not animals or monsters as other authors thought. He thinks that they need to be converted to his beliefs, because he is ‘right’, to be fully human beings. I get this feeling from his statement, “Clearly, to bring all these people to Christianity and subjection to Your Imperial Majesty, they must be won by kindness, the only certain way.” (Pg 67) Therefore, to me, this says that he thinks the Indians, along with himself, are just the same as the English Christians.

Cabeza de Vaca writes, “After this we had a hot argument with them (the Christians), for they meant to make slaves of the Indians in our train.” (Pg 69) He believes the Indians are human too and are able to live the life they are ‘supposed’ to live. Although he could not get the ones he lived with to believe it; he says, “To the last I could not convince the Indians that we were of the same people as the

Download as (for upgraded members)  txt (3.3 Kb)   pdf (66 Kb)   docx (11.1 Kb)  
Continue for 2 more pages »