Spirit Of Crazy Horse Analysis

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Whilst there has been countless attacks on the Native American people the Battle of Wounded Knee, if you can in fact call it a battle, is the event that can be held as the most accountable for the destruction of the native American culture; the obliteration of their hope and dreams. The Battle of Wounded Knee resulted in the death of three hundred Native Americans, half of which were women and children. White Plume, in the article In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, explains that “the whole Sioux Nation was wounded at that last terrible massacre, and we’ve been suffering ever since”. This sentiment is expressed throughout the remaining article as well as in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues. On the night of the 29th of December 1890 the American Government destroyed Native American culture, yet again. As well as slaughtering the members of the Lakota tribe present that evening the officers slaughtered the horses. In Native American culture horses play a significant role both as a form of transport, but also as a symbol of hope. Therefore the brutal slaughter of the horses was effective in destroying the Native American culture on two levels; intellectual and emotional. Throughout Reservation Blues Alexie uses the symbol of screaming horses whenever an event that is detrimental to Native American culture occurs. White Plume describes the …show more content…

She is in her kitchen, working away, when she hears the screams of the horses; “the song was so pained and tortured that Big Mom could never have imagined it before the white men came along” (Alexie 9). This quote describes the horse’s reaction to their slaughter at Wounded Knee many years ago, and shows that their screams are still heard today. As the novel proceeds the horses scream countless times to foreshadow the negative events that are to come for the Native Americans on the

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