Caught Between Worlds: British Captivity Narratives in Fact and FictionUniversity Press of Kentucky - Literary Criticism |
Contents
Travel Travail and the British Captivity Tradition | 13 |
The Captive as Hero | 62 |
The Perils and the Powers of Cultural Conversion | 94 |
Narratives of Fiction | 125 |
Mastering Captivity | 127 |
Resisting Americans in British Novels of American Captivity | 172 |
Utopian Captivities and other African Paradoxes | 224 |
Other editions - View all
Caught between Worlds: British Captivity Narratives in Fact and Fiction Joe Snader Limited preview - 2021 |
Caught between Worlds: British Captivity Narratives in Fact and Fiction Joe Snader Limited preview - 2014 |
Caught between Worlds: British Captivity Narratives in Fact and Fiction Joe Snader No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
abject Adventures African aggressive Algerian alien culture American captivity Amerindian Aubin's Barbary captivity Berington's British captivity narratives Britons captive's captivity episode captivity experience captivity genre captivity narratives captivity plot capture century Chetwood Christian civilization colonial colonists confinement describes despotism developed Drury Drury's early modern Eben-ezer eighteenth eighteenth-century escape especially ethnographic European experience of captivity factual failed adoption plot female captive fiction frame tale framework freedom genre's Haywood hero heroic heroism ideal images imagined initial Islamic Jovinian Knox's land liberation liberty Lucca Madagascar male Mary Jemison master Memmo Mezzorain narration Native American native culture novel Oriental captivity Orientalist Paltock paradox passive pattern Pellow's Peter Wilkins political portrays protagonist provides Puritan renegado rhetoric Robert Boyle Robert Drury Robert Paltock seems sexual slave slavery social stereotypes subjugation suggests tension tion tive tivity torture transculturation transformation travel description travel narratives tyranny utopian violence vision Western women