Susan Cloud Discrimination

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The systematic racism and discrimination in America has long lasting effects that began back when Europeans first stepped foot on American soil is still visible today but only not written into the law. This racism has lead to very specific consequences on the Native people in today’s modern world, and while the racism is maybe not as obvious it is still very present. These modern Native peoples fight against the feeling of community as a Native person, and feeling entirely alone and not a part of it. The poem “The Reservation” by Susan Cloud and “The Real Indian Leans Against” by Chrystos examine the different effects and different settings of how their cultures survived but also how so much was lost for them within their own identity. …show more content…

Her mother would spend hours “torturing that wild hair” (8-9), and berating her to “sit with [her] knees together” (12). Her mother forced her to adopt these mannerisms and beauty ideals so that she would not be treated differently by others around her. However, the speaker felt conflicted in her identity as a Native person by the want to be closer to her mother, but her mother pushing away. When she played as a child she personified her desire to be accepting of her culture by referring to herself as “the savage” (29). “The” savage, not “one of the” savages exemplifies the fact that she felt she was alone in her identity and beliefs even though she was surrounded by her family around her that shared the same background. The forced assimilation she and her family experienced separated them from each other and experienced a loss of community and together to try and fight back against this discrimination against …show more content…

The speaker stands alone in front of a tobacco shop. She feels insignificant and removed from her culture next to the “the doll[s that] would look better at a Powwow than her” (6). She struggled and fought to survive in a society that has no respect for her or her culture. She lives in a place that will sell dolls stereotyping and disrespecting her culture right next to a “blonde blow up fuck me doll” (15). A “fuck me” doll right next to what is sacred to her. The speaker alone faces the impudence as she is the sole “Real Indian” standing there. The speaker never refers to a “we” or a collective that she is a part but only speaks to her own feelings, and while that is a strong message and feeling of how a true single person feels. The singularity reveals that she lacks a community that she is a part of and people around her who she knows feels the same way. There are “more fake Indians than real ones” in America (17). She is outnumbered by the cheap imitations that are violating and disregarding her culture. She is outnumbered and cannot fight back against the discrimination however she feels it so acutely. She stands there completely alone with her feelings while wearing the “jeans” she was forced to wear in order to survive in a place that holds no courtesy

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