Indian Education Sherman Alexie Analysis

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In "Indian Education" by Sherman Alexie, the story is about our narrator of the story Victor. Telling the sad, miserable cruelty and the emotions that his fellow students and teachers gave him from 1st grade all the way through 12th grade. The meaning of this story at first seems the most current for kids in school; bullying each other and calling each other names but the story goes much deeper than that. It shows a reality of the life on the reservation and how the education system is terrible and demeaning to other children who are considered soft spoken. Two pieces of dialogue that were the most interesting to me happened to be "Give me your lunch if you're just going to throw it up," because it ends with the sentence "There is more than one way to starve. …show more content…

These girls in the school have other ways to starve themselves even if it's not puking. This makes me realize how sad it is for girls who don't realize how beautiful they are. Another piece of Dialogue that I liked was "Throw the first punch, ". It was one of my favorites because it taught Victor to fight back and be strong and to him it was a "valuable lesson about living in the white world" so we see some character development. In the story by the way Victor speaks I personally see he's smart but learning and very cautious since he's been through so much all his life. I learned that Victor is trying to find himself, even though there's so much going on in his life. Victors second grade teacher Betty Towle punishes him rather rewards him for acing his spelling bee showing that she didn't think as a Indian boy he wouldn't amount to much. In ninth grade, a teacher assumes that Victor is an alcoholic because he is native American. This is showing a few of the characters to be racist and have discrimination against him because of the color of his

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