Piety and Dissent: Race, Gender, and Biblical Rhetoric in Early American Autobiography

Piety and Dissent: Race, Gender, and Biblical Rhetoric in Early American Autobiography

by Eileen R. Elrod
Piety and Dissent: Race, Gender, and Biblical Rhetoric in Early American Autobiography

Piety and Dissent: Race, Gender, and Biblical Rhetoric in Early American Autobiography

by Eileen R. Elrod

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

For pious converts to Christianity in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century New England, all reality was shaped by religious devotion and biblical text. It is therefore not surprising that earnest believers who found themselves marginalized by their race or sex relied on their faith to reconcile the tension between the spiritual experience of rebirth and the social ordeal of exclusion and injustice. In Piety and Dissent, Eileen Razzari Elrod examines the religious autobiographies of six early Americans who represented various sorts of marginality: John Marrant, Olaudah Equiano, and Jarena Lee, all of African or African American heritage; Samson Occom (Mohegan) and William Apess (Pequot); and Abigail Abbott Bailey, a white woman who was subjected to extreme domestic violence. Through close readings of these personal narratives, Elrod uncovers the complex rhetorical strategies employed by pious outsiders to challenge the particular kinds of oppression each experienced. She identifies recurrent ideals and images drawn from Scripture and Protestant tradition—parables of liberation, rage, justice, and opposition to authority—that allowed them to see resistance as a religious act and, more than that, imbued them with a sense of agency. What the life stories of these six individuals reveal, according to Elrod, is that conventional Christianity in early America was not the hegemonic force that church leaders at the time imagined, and that many people since have believed it to be. Nor was there a clear distinction between personal piety and religious, social, and political resistance. To understand fully the role of religion in the early period of American letters, we must rethink some of our most fundamental assumptions about the function of Christian faith in the context of individual lives.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781558496293
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 02/06/2008
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: (w) x (h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Eileen Razzari Elrod is associate professor of English at Santa Clara University.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations     ix
Acknowledgments     xi
Margins and Centers, New and Old Narrations: Biblical Voices, Great Awakening Christianity, and American Autobiographical Traditions     1
"I Did Not Make Myself So ...": Samson Occom and American Religious Autobiography     21
John Marrant, John Smith, Jesus: Borders, Tangles, and Knots in Marrant's 1785 Narrative     38
Moses and the Egyptian: Religious Authority in Olaudah Equiano's Interesting Narrative     62
Gender, Christian Suffering, and the Minister's Voice: Submission and Agency in Abigail Abbot Bailey's Memoirs     85
Devotion and Dissent: Jarena Lee's Rhetoric of Conversion and Call     117
Finding a Way in the Forest: The Religious Discourse of Race and Justice in the Autobiographies of William Apess     146
Religious Imperatives, Democratic Voices, and Autobiographical Preoccupations     171
Notes     187
Works Cited     201
Index     217

What People are Saying About This

Philip F. Gura

This book accomplishes much in short compass.... One of Elrod's goals is to return an understanding of religion to the center of scholarship about early American texts, and she does that capably and imaginatively.... Spiritual autobiography remains one of the most 'teachable' genres in early American literature, and Elrod's book will extend how we conceive and follow through on such instruction.

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