Analysis Of Novena To Bad Indians

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“California is a story. California is many stories.” But whose story is heard? What stories are forgotten? In the memoir, Bad Indians, Native American writer and poet Deborah A. Miranda constructs meaning about the untold experiences of indigenous people under the colonial period of American history. Her memoir disrupts a “coherent narrative” and takes us on a detour that deviates from the alleged facts presented in our high school history books. Despite her emphasis on the brutalization of the Indigenous people in California during the colonization period, Miranda’s use of the Christian Novena, “Novena to Bad Indians,” illustrates an ‘absurd’ ironic stance amidst cruelty and violence. The elocution of the Novena itself, and the Christian …show more content…

Historically, the Novena was used to describe a nine-day period dedicated as a prayer of petition, and was usually connected to a sense of urgency. Miranda writes a corresponding paragraph for each day of the Novena, and she deliberately uses this form of worship not as a communication to God, but to her ancestors. For instance, on Day Five, she states, “Dear Atanasio…shot dead by a firing squad at seventeen of age, begging for your life as you knelt in the estuary at Monterey: guide me out of the stone walls of this cell” (98). Miranda is praying to her ancestors with such vigor, it seems that she wants to repent her actions. Not only does the author subtly sheds light on the brutal treatment of “unholy pagans who refused to convert” (99), but she also takes on a counter-discourse to the …show more content…

Professor and poet Deborah A. Miranda, pieces together the past and uncovers and presents us with a story--a Californian story--in her memoir, “Bad Indians.” Her use of the Christian Novena, “Novena to Bad Indians,” illustrates the irony of using the form of her oppressors as a call out for help, not to God, but to her past ancestors. We tend to think of religion as a form of salvation and redemption of our lives here on Earth, in which we bare down and ask for forgiveness. But by challenging this common discourse using theological allegories and satirical terminology, Miranda turns her attention away from a Deity to call the reader out for help. It is crucial to recognize the struggles that the Native community currently face. Californian Indians are often not given recognition for their identity and their heritage, and are also repeatedly stereotyped as abusive, alcoholic, uncivilized, and “freeloaders” of the United States government. Such generalizations root back from European colonization, nevertheless still linger in our contemporary society. Miranda has taken the first step forward in characterizing few of these stereotypes in her Novena, but she’s given her story. Now what are we going to do with ours? It’s up to us to create our

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