erdrich tracks Essays

  • Use of Humor in Erdrich's Tracks

    1853 Words  | 4 Pages

    Use of Humor in Erdrich's Tracks An old adage claims that laughter is the best medicine to cure human ailments.  Although this treatment might sound somewhat unorthodox, its value as a remedy can be traced back to ancient times when Hypocrites, in his medical treatise, stressed the importance of  “a gay and cheerful mood on the part of the physician and patient fighting disease” (Bakhtin 67).  Aristotle viewed laughter as man’s quintessential privilege:  “Of all living creatures only man is

  • Survival And Adaptation

    544 Words  | 2 Pages

    Survival and Adaptation Tom King and his family are not wealthy. In order for them to survive Tom had to box. Tom King was very old to be boxing. He had to change his way of fighting to even have a remote chance of wining. In Tracks by Louise Erdrich Eli and Nanapush had to learn to live with each other to survive. Nevertheless Tom King and Eli both did what they had to do too survive. They are good examples of strength and determination. Tom King was not a rich man but a poor one. Jack London writes

  • Indian Boarding School

    1589 Words  | 4 Pages

    and symbolizes and compares emotions with other things in life. Louise Erdrich's poem Indian Boarding School puts the emotions of a person or group of people in a setting around a railroad track. The feelings experienced are compared to things from the setting, which takes on human characteristics. Louise Erdrich was born part German, part American Indian. Since the title and other references in the poem refer to Indian people, it is most likely that this poem was very personal to her. The boarding

  • Louise Erdrich's Tracks

    1117 Words  | 3 Pages

    Louise Erdrich's Tracks In Louise Erdrich’s “Tracks';, the readers discovers by the second chapter that there are two narrators, Nanapush and Pauline Puyat. This method of having two narrators telling their stories alternately could be at first confusing, especially if the readers hasn’t been briefed about it or hasn’t read a synopsis of it. Traditionally, there is one narrator in the story, but Erdrich does an effective and spectacular job in combining Nanapush and Pauline’s stories. It is

  • Racism in in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye

    599 Words  | 2 Pages

    Both Toni Morrison's novel about an African American family in Ohio during the 1930s and 1940s, The Bluest Eye and Louise Erdrich;s novel about the Anishinabe tribe in the 1920s in North Dakota, Tracks are, in part, about seeing.  Both novels examine the effects of a kind of seeing that is refracted through the lens of racism by subjects of racism themselves.  Erdrich's Pauline Puyat and Morrison's Pecola Breedlove are crazy from their dealings with racism and themselves suffer from an internalized

  • The Inner Struggle In Erdrich's Tracks

    597 Words  | 2 Pages

    In her novel Tracks, Erdrich portrays the twentieth-century Native American life especially that of Ojibwa in and around Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota. All the characters in the novel are in a midst of struggling. They are between life and death, home and exile, native and white identity and mixed breed. Native are struggle to survive in a changing situation and climate. The novel is “lauded as Erdrich’s most ‘Indian’ novels in respect to both historical and tribal issues” (Wilson 17)

  • Lulu Nanapush Character Analysis

    865 Words  | 2 Pages

    A common theme of social and political male-assertiveness is prominent throughout the course of history. This occurrence subjects females to serve as the less privileged gender, and has created much controversy. Within the novel Tracks, Louise Erdrich conveys differentiating social commentary through the leading, female characters: Fleur Pillager, Pauline Puyat, Margaret Kashpaw, and Lulu Nanapush. Patriarchy is not defined to the extent of popular belief in the story, but can be easily observed

  • The Theme Of Tracks By Louise Erdrich's Tracks

    1670 Words  | 4 Pages

    In her novel Tracks, Louise Erdrich voices the story of a Chipewyan tribe in the early twentieth century in their struggle to preserve their identity and survive. The Europeans quest to drain people of their land, culture, language and spiritual practices provides the basis to the question of identity seen among characters presented throughout the novel. However, it is primarily through Nanapush’s attempt to maintain the Chipewyan identity through his role as both an elder and trickster, his interplay

  • Pocahontas and the Mythical Indian Woman

    5417 Words  | 11 Pages

    Anna. "Caretaking and the Work of the Text in Linda Hogan's Mean Spirit."SAIL. 6 3 (Fall 1994): 37-48. Donovan, Kathleen M. Feminist Readings of Native American Literature: Coming to Voice. Tuscon: U of Arizona Press, 1998: 76-120. Erdrich, Louise. Tracks. New York: Harper & Row, 1998. Green, Rayna, "The Pocahontas Perplex." Native American Voices: A Reader, ed. Susan Lobo and Steve Talbot. New York: Longman, 1998. 182-92. Gunn Allen, Paula. "The Feminine Landscape of Leslie Marmon Silko's

  • Ojibwe Society In Louise Erdrich's Tracks

    1470 Words  | 3 Pages

    In her 1988 novel Tracks, American author Louise Erdrich explores the transformational factors of Ojibwe society in the 1910s. Amid lurid tales of cultural larceny and the erosion of traditional animism, she discusses a key catalyst for social change: the acceptance of the Roman Catholic faith by many Ojibwe. Erdrich condemns those self-denying, death-rooted elements of Catholicism that divide a people caught between traditional and modern identities, selecting her troubled co-narrator, teenaged

  • Marie Lazarre Kashpaw and Lulu Lamartine: Matriarchs of the Chippewa Tribe

    1421 Words  | 3 Pages

    The instinct for survival occurs almost at birth resulting in the development of women who transcend a culture predicated on gender bias. In Love Medicine, a twentieth century novel about two families who reside on the Indian reservation, Louise Erdrich tells the story of Marie Lazarre and Lulu Lamartine, two female characters quite different in nature, who are connected by their love and lust for Nector Kashpaw, head of the Chippewa tribe. Marie is a member of a family shunned by the residents

  • Red Convertible

    957 Words  | 2 Pages

    before and after Vietnam for Henry Have you ever wanted to take the summer off from work and escape from reality in order to travel around the world without having any worries? Well this is what Henry and Lyman in the “Red Convertible” by Louise Erdrich decided to do one summer. Henry and Lyman are two brothers who grew up on the Indian reservation. They perceive life on the reservation as an ongoing circle with a harmonious atmosphere. During their trip to Montana and Alaska Henry and Lyman’s idea

  • The Effects of Vietnam War in The Red Convertible by Louise Erdich

    1837 Words  | 4 Pages

    Convertible” The “Red Convertible” by Louise Erdich is a realistic short story which presents readers a picture of the effects of the Vietnam War on American Indian families, which reflected the existing situation of Native Americans at that time. Erdrich is of Chippewa Indian decent and is well known for her psychological depth in literature. In the story “Red Convertible” we (as the readers) follow along as Lyman narrates the blissful times of his youth to the tragic death of his brother. Two young

  • Transformation in Louise Erdrich's The Red Convertible

    1088 Words  | 3 Pages

    place, the brothers' innocence is soon lost. Before the war, the Lamartine brothers, Henry and Lyman, are naive and carefree. They spend all of their time together. They even buy a car together. This red convertible is the most notable way that Erdrich represents the boys' innocence in the story. To get this car, they spend all of the money they have, without even thinking about it. "[B]efore we had thought it over at all, the car belonged to us and our pockets were empty" (461). Soon after

  • Mentorship In Louise Erdrich's Tracks

    1075 Words  | 3 Pages

    Mentorship: From Childhood to the Man Louise Erdrich explores the inner conflicts of an Indian tribe in her novel Tracks. By the end of the novel, the tribes’ accord is broken by the lure of the white man’s money and land reform. The divisions among the tribe are epitomized by the physical separation of the Chippewa people into different colors that correspond to their different land allotments. However, one chapter in particular contrasts with the tribe’s tendency towards discord. Chapter 5, in

  • Hidden Words And The Life Of Middle School

    1270 Words  | 3 Pages

    document, captured the year through photographs, student produced artwork, and captions. Sports held a prominent place in the pages of the yearbook: photos of football, wrestling (which I both proudly represented as team captain), track, and baseball events for the boys; and track, tennis, volleyball, and basketball for the girls filled the pages. The book also contained photos of the school mascot, a drug and alcohol awareness club, and the drama club. At Fayette Middle School, the yearbook had become

  • Personal Narrative - Slumber Party

    1156 Words  | 3 Pages

    neck began to rise as we listened to the cold aching silence. In the distance we listened to three loud car horns and a door slam. We, then, jumped away from the window and started down the stairs. Half way down the stairs, we stopped dead in our tracks. The roof began to rattle as if someone was climbing across it. Our pulses raced as we flew down the remainder of the stairs. Thump-thump, breath. We huddled together in the kitchen. For our safety, we gathered a sharp knife and a phone. We came

  • Sports Narrative - Track State Champion

    1317 Words  | 3 Pages

    Personal Narrative- Track State Champion With shaky knees, I hesitantly made my way up the large white steps. With the back of my hand, I brushed away a few salty tears of relief. As I stood at the top of the podium and looked up into the packed stadium, my mind drifted back to everything I had gone through to achieve this moment, the day I became a state champion. The start of the 2002 track season found me concerned with how I would perform. After a disastrous bout with mononucleosis

  • superman for president

    611 Words  | 2 Pages

    pressure of making an important choice for this country. The September 11th incident would be the perfect example. There is a better way to handle this than just bombing everywhere. If Superman were president the planes would have been stopped in their tracks and placed safely on the ground. The economy is another area t...

  • Sim City Forever

    932 Words  | 2 Pages

    'Terrain.'; That is where the fun begins. The player's next duty is to start building. Essentially what is happening is that the player is assuming the role of a god-like figure. They are given the control to make decisions such as, laying railroad tracks, placing hospitals, police stations, fire stations, zoning, laying water pipes, placing roads, and perhaps the most important setting taxes. Who would not like to have control of their own little world where they had this much power? After all of