Deborah Miranda And Haunani-Kay Trask Analysis

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Both Deborah Miranda and Haunani-Kay Trask use their poetry to assert the treatment of their ancestors and peers as a direct result of colonization. Miranda, a Native American writer and poet, has ancestors from the Esselen and Chumash people, tribes native to California. She also has French and Jewish ancestry as part of her lineage. Trask, a Native Hawaiian, serves as a diplomat and activist for indigenous Hawaiian natives. While Native Hawaiians and Native Americans have vastly different cultures and backgrounds, there are many similarities between these two groups of indigenous peoples simply because of one key connection: the colonization of their land by white people. Native Americans and Native Hawaiians did not simply lose their …show more content…

In Miranda’s poem “Stories I Tell My Daughter,” she describes a girl who defends her identity and her honor when a boy at school questions her. Miranda states, “That day/ I took bloody sticks home to my mother,/ who said she expected nothing less/ from a girl/ who spoke/ to owls” (Indian Cartography 5-6). In the poem, “owls,” a symbol of intelligence and enlightenment, acts as a reminder of the important cultural connection between Native Americans and nature. The girl has reached enlightenment and new found strength because she realizes that she does not have to succumb to the white children’s abuse and she finally reacts to the exploitation. When referring to “mother,” one thinks of a caregiver and nurturer. The mother nurtures the daughter who has learned to defend herself and break social norms in order to protect her cultural identity. Finally, “bloody” implies violence and rage. When discussing indigenous poetry, the violence described typically refers to the bloodshed of the natives; however, ironically the blood in this poem results from an attack on a white person. Though Miranda does not encourage violence, she does encourage action from strong women when their cultural identities are being questioned. Likewise, Trask also connects strong women who break social norms with change. In her poem “Sons,” she addresses the social expectations of women and the familial obligations many of them abide by in their homes. Trask states, “I am slyly/ Reproductive: ideas/ books,/ history/ politics, reproducing/ the rope of resistance/ for unborn generations” (Light in the Crevice Never Seen 55-56). To begin, “resistance” refers to defiance and a refusal to conform. The speaker is assertively stating that she will serve as an activist for future Native Hawaiians who will

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