Native Bondage, Narrative Mobility: African American Accounts of Indian Captivity

Haas, Astrid orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-8628-8129 (2022) Native Bondage, Narrative Mobility: African American Accounts of Indian Captivity. Journal of American Studies, 56 (2). pp. 242-266. ISSN 0021-8758

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021875821000852

Abstract

The article studies African American narratives of indigenous captivity from its emergence in the mid-eighteenth century to the mid-nineteenth. Taking accounts by Briton Hammon, John Marrant, Henry Bibb, and James Beckwourth as examples, the essay charts the development of this body of writings, its distinction from white-authored narratives, and its contribution to North American autobiography. In so doing, the article argues that the black-authored texts strategically employed only certain elements of the Indian captivity narrative and that they blended these with aspects of other types of Western autobiography to claim black people's agency and discursive authority in white-dominated print culture.


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