Allan Arata-Vega Ms. Meredith AP English August 17, 2016 Reservation Blues Reservation Blues, a novel written by Sherman Alexie meant for anyone with the ability to understand its words to be read. This can be said solely from the purpose, or theme, of the book. That theme is the fact that everything happens for a reason as your desires could stare you in the eye without you realizing. In the beginning of the book, a black man named Robert Johnson walks into the Spokane Indian reservation looking for one woman to help him, and Thomas Builds-The-Fire selflessly goes and helps him as his whole reservation has never seen a man with such a dark skin tone. This was where he was staring his ambition in the eye, as Rob had a guitar that would change Tom and a group of his friend’s lives throughout the story. His lifetime bullies would become his partners; he would finally find the love of his life, which he never thought he could find, and his tribe would finally become more diverse, and not just a group of drunken Indians. Chapter 1 In the first chapter of Reservation blues we can see the early play of magical realism in the Spokane tribe as Big Mom has been alive for 134 years and the Gentleman can hear and see Robert Johnson do things in every which he does them. The purpose being shown in the first chapter is the fact to shed light on Indian Culture as it shows how they have crazy stories to tell with their crazy beliefs, and maybe are sort of isolated to themselves as
One of the themes used in the book is of racism towards the Natives. An example used in the book is of Edward Sheriff Curtis who was a photographer of 1900s. Curtis was interested in taking pictures of Native people, but not just any Native person. “Curtis was looking for the literary Indian, the dying Indian, the imaginative construct” (King, 2003; pp. 34). He used many accessories to dress up people up “who did not look as the Indian was supposed to look” (King, 2003; pp.34). He judged people based on his own assumptions without any knowledge of the group and their practices. Curtis reduced the identity of the Native Americans to a single iconic quintessential image of what Native meant to white society. The idea related to the image of this group of people during the 1900s consisted of racism in terms of the “real looking Indian”. This is not
Thomas-builds-the-fire, as we all do, struggles with the idea of race, culture and identity. He is in the band Coyote Springs and feels a deep connection to the Black Americans who created the blues, the music that they play. However, he and his bandmates are Native American and still want to stay true to their own identities. For example, Phil Sheridan, despite having Coyote Springs, whose members were actually Native American, recruited Betty and Veronica, who were willing to do as Sheridan wanted and conform to what the“Indian” perception was at the time. Sheridan talks to Wright about “[getting] them into the tanning booth. [To] darken them up a bit…a little plastic surgery on those cheekbones. Get them a little higher…dye their hair black”
There are an infinite amount of unique responses to the question “What is the meaning of life?”. However, the majority of people will agree that the true meaning of life is to find happiness and what is really important to one’s self. In Jon Krakauer’s, Into The Wild, Chris McCandless conveys this idealism through his life’s journey as he bravely defies all limitations. Chris McCandless isolates himself from society in his Alaskan Odyssey as a way to defy accepted expectations and to begin discovering the meanings of life without any corrupted influences.
There are many ways in which we can view the history of the American West. One view is the popular story of Cowboys and Indians. It is a grand story filled with adventure, excitement and gold. Another perspective is one of the Native Plains Indians and the rich histories that spanned thousands of years before white discovery and settlement. Elliot West’s book, Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers and the Rush to Colorado, offers a view into both of these worlds. West shows how the histories of both nations intertwine, relate and clash all while dealing with complex geological and environmental challenges. West argues that an understanding of the settling of the Great Plains must come from a deeper understanding, a more thorough
I believe that out of the four essays that we have read, the essay that presents the best and most powerful argument is presented by Mike Rose "Blue Collar Brilliance" (Rose, 2015). First Rose describes how his mother who work as a waitress in a restaurant. He defines his mother's, Rose Meraglio (Rosie) ability, “Rosie took customers’ orders, pencil poised over pad, while fielding questions about the food. She walked full tilt through the room with plates stretching up her left arm and two cups of coffee somehow cradled in her right hand. She stood at a table or booth and removed a plate from this person, another for that person, then another, remembering who had the hamburger, who had the fried shrimp, almost always getting it right….she’d
In April of 1992, a young man of the age of twenty-four, later determined to be Chris McCandless ' body, was discovered in an old Fairbanks bus in the Alaskan bush. Four years after his death, Jon Krakauer wrote a novel titled Into The Wild, the book traced McCandless 's journey around much of the United States, across the West side of Canada, and even down to the boarder of Mexico. Over the many years since his death, speculations have arisen about how death was brought upon him. Most believe starvation was the only reason, but with extensive research Jon Krakauer discovered another theory, that a substance in the seeds that Chris McCandless was ingesting was a contributing factor to his death. Even with this conclusion many around the world despise Chris for his being naive and unprepared when walking into the wild. While others believe he was brave for following his dreams and never letting anyone talk him out of his plans. Chris McCandless was an adventurer who was brave enough to never back down, but in the end his luck turned for the worst and was misfortunate enough to have ate the wrong type of food. McCandless was an inspiration and a lesson to people of all ages, that dreams aren 't meant to be taken lightly and even with possible risks they should be followed. Jon Krakauer 's book tells a marvelous story of a young man who left behind the outside world to do what he loved the most.
The short story On The Bridge by Todd Strasser is about two boys, Adam and Seth, who are hanging out after school on a bridge that overlooks the highway. Seth was the character that demonstrated maturity towards the end of the story. He showed some examples of this when Adam got them into some trouble. For example, when Adam flicked his cigarette onto the windshield of a car below the bridge, the drivers came up behind them. “But suddenly he [Seth] noticed that all three guys were staring at him. He quickly looked at Adam and saw why. Adam was pointing at him.” It was this point where Seth started to question his friendship with Adam, because they had gotten into trouble because of Adam, and then he blamed it on Seth. After the men left, Seth
The articles “Blue-Collar Brilliance” written by Mike Rose and “Are Too Many People Going to College?” by Charles Murray discuss the importance of education and its outcomes. Both authors talk about people’s careers on the aspect of whether a college degree made them succeed in life or it is just an expensive waste of time. Also, each article has its own opinion over the fact that some people with college education aren’t able to find jobs while others with no college background are able to succeed. Rose and Murray, both agreed on the idea that college isn’t for all just simply because of its cost, and how each person’s intelligence does not depend on their acceptance to a college; further, both authors also acknowledge the importance of blue-collar workers and their prosperity.
Native Americans make up less than .9% of the United States population. With this trivial number, it is difficult to keep its culture and traditions alive as generations progress. In the short story “War Dances,” author Sherman Alexie morns the loss of Native American identity through a deprecating tone which illustrate a divide between generations.
Summary of Mike Rose’s “Blue-Collar Brilliance” “Blue-Collar Brilliance” by Mike Rose is a reading that explain the different intelligence of the employees in a common job. Like the intelligence of a waitress or foreman and how they perform their work. In the reading, Rose describe the different task that his mother and his uncle do every day in their work. In addition, he stated that every job use cognitive thinking.
A theme that leads the novel from beginning to end is the overcoming of racism and prejudice. The author herself was a member of the Little Rock Nine, the first group of black students to integrate an all-white high school. She revealed all her personal experiences while attending this school, which included being hit, cursed, threatened, spat on, etc. Despite all these dreadful occurrences, Beals and the rest of the Little Rock Nine, besides one who was killed, remained and fought for social equality, resisting the attempts of many to prevent their attending at this high
The Trail of Tears was a huge turning point seen by Amy Sturgis, as clearly shown in her chapter, “The Trail of Tears as a Turning Point”. Sturgis have separated how the Trail of Tears has affected history into three categories: the world, the US, and for the Cherokee Nation. All three categories intermingle, affecting one another with either a positive or a negative feedback.
When determining what I wanted my art piece to capture, the best sample of Reservation Blues was the opening song of chapter five: “My God Has Dark Skin” (131-132). This song touched on many themes and emotions I wanted to include, so I used it as inspiration for my drawings. I decided to draw two of the emotions/self-image I envisioned the artist of the song had when writing the lyrics. I portrayed a Spokane woman in my work because the female characters in the novel, along with many Native American women, endure many hardships through societal standards on and off their reservations.
Shortly after the civil war the fourteenth amendment was passed which granted citizenship to all individuals born or naturalized in America; this group included slaves both former and current. However, individuals of African American appearance would be treated like aliens in their own country for years to come. In the eighteen eighties Jim Crow Laws were passed that segregated Black individuals and often subjected them to humiliating conditions. These conditions exasperate and trouble all of the characters in the novel Black No More. In this novel by George Schuyler Blacks are degraded and oppressed because of the color of their skin. This oppression is caused by ignorant prejudices that individuals in the novel hold. Schuyler uses satire, elevated language, and imagery to further support the idea that ignorance can be as great a power or greater than the greed caused for money.
The Interlopers by Saki, is set in the forest somewhere in the eastern spurs of Carpathians. The story is focused on two men by the names of Ulrich von Gradwitz and Georg Znaeym. The two men are enemies over land, each detailing ill wishes to each other. The fued had been going on since before their time, so It was natural that the two would do the same.