Root Words Gwen Westerman Analysis

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In general, differing qualities are what make individual unique. Similarly, traditions, language, religion, and culture as a whole are few of many aspects that make societies differentiate from one another. When a society is suppressed in practice of their religious beliefs or language, it begins to diminish their individuality amongst rising colonization efforts. The following novels, poems, and films demonstrate the negative impact of colonization. The novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, shares the adverse effects of colonization on an Nigerian native tribe called the Ibo. The Ibo people suffer to maintain their culture as continued British settlers colonize their land. The poem Root Words by Gwen Westerman is a concrete poem about …show more content…

Through colonization native languages begins to diminish amongst the world around them. Gwen Westerman writing in Root Words demonstrates the effect of colonization on language, “Our language/is like those prairie grasses/surviving the fires/of missionaries and their gods/floods of English words/drought, growing/in unexpected places as if it had never been gone/Makoce Kin etanhan/ enhipi. Ikce/ wicasta tehikapi/ Dakota iapi teunjihijdapi” (Gwen Westerman). On the surface of the prairie grass the native language may seem as though it has disappeared through years of endless colonization. But, as the author gets deeper into the roots the Dakota language is still being preserved. The “floods of English words” make it difficult to maintain one's culture, leaving few people with the past language as a part of them. In the movie Rabbit Proof Fence, three native Aborigines girls were taken away from their homes to work for the British government. The impact of their language being taken away from them is demonstrate when an older sister says a few words in her native language to her younger sister. The girls get scolded for using a part of their culture and are forced to only speak English (Phillip Noyce). The stress the colonizers put on the assimilation of the Natives demonstrates the lasting impact of colonization to native people. Speaking an original language was frowned upon due to …show more content…

Religion is another factor that makes an group of people differ from one another. In the poem We Come From the Stars (author) introduces the upon the idea of colonizations effect on language. Through the use of storytelling the author writes, “Our creation story tells us we came from the start to this place Bdote/ where the Minnesota and Mississippi rivers converge/ our journey along the Wanagi Canjku/ in our universe. The author’s explanation of how the Dakota people came to be on earth shows the rooting in their religion. Although through colonization religion becomes harder to maintain because of the surrounding of “million million urban uplights”, trumping the original inhabitants. The million lights represents the colonizers in the poem, they are bright and powerful. So powerful that sometimes you are no longer able to see the stars. The stars represent the Dakota people, who are trying to be heard but find it extremely difficult knowing that the lights are more powerful than the stars. The reference to “our universe” proves the aspect of the struggle to preserve one's religion because the stars will be around forever even if they get outshined by the lights. Their religion slowly fades as colonization introduces more “lights” into this world. And the only way to maintain the future culture is to remember the past. The problem increases when one is

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