captivity narrative
0 sources
captivity narrative
Summary
captivity narrative is a literary genre[1]. It draws 125 Wikipedia views per month (literary_genre category, ranking #117 of 487).[2]
Key Facts
- captivity narrative's image is recorded as Boone abduction.jpg[3].
- captivity narrative's image is recorded as E. Irving Couse, 'The Captive', 1891.jpg[4].
- captivity narrative's image is recorded as Hannah Duston Killing the Indians, 1847.webp[5].
- captivity narrative's instance of is recorded as literary genre[6].
- captivity narrative's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh00001292[7].
- captivity narrative's subclass of is recorded as literary work[8].
- captivity narrative's subclass of is recorded as autobiography[9].
- captivity narrative's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09rgr2[10].
- captivity narrative's Library of Congress Genre/Form Terms ID is recorded as gf2014026056[11].
- captivity narrative's Encyclopedia of the Great Plains ID is recorded as gen.007[12].
- captivity narrative's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007291757905171[13].
- captivity narrative's Oxford Bibliographies ID is recorded as 9780199827251-0115[14].
- captivity narrative's Encyclopedia.com ID is recorded as arts/culture-magazines/captivity-narratives[15].
- captivity narrative's Oxford Reference overview ID is recorded as 20110803095548418[16].
- captivity narrative's Oxford Reference overview ID is recorded as 20110803100001178[17].
- captivity narrative's Wellcome Collection concept ID is recorded as uxtekt52[18].
- captivity narrative's Yale LUX ID is recorded as concept/0912a95a-b095-464b-a195-aadcff696cf0[19].
Why It Matters
captivity narrative draws 125 Wikipedia views per month (literary_genre category, ranking #117 of 487).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]