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Stirrup, David – American Indian Quarterly, 2005
David Treuer's debut novel, "Little" (1995), is set on a Minnesota reservation, centering around a dilapidated housing tract that its small community of residents call "Poverty." Aptly named both for the condition and background of the housing, this name is the first pointer to the type of multifaceted reading that the novel…
Descriptors: Novels, American Indian Literature, Literary Devices, Cultural Background
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Antell, Judith A. – American Indian Quarterly, 1988
Examines common themes in three Native American novels by N. Scott Momaday, James Welch, and Leslie Silko: the power of Indian women's femaleness, and reintegration of the alienated male protagonist through ancient rituals that awaken the realization of the feminine principle within himself. (SV)
Descriptors: Alienation, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Females
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Sands, Kathleen M. – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Focusing on the natural world, the use of myth and ritual in the novel, and the formal design of the work, symposium papers present and analyze crucial themes and forms in Leslie Marmon Silko's "Ceremony," a novel distinctively Indian in narrative technique, thematic content, and structure. (CM)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
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Beidler, Peter G. – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Tayo's war experiences have destroyed his reverence for the creatures of nature. His changed attitude of respect for animals, his acceptance of their apparently evil acts, and his imitation of them indicate his healing. By observing animals, Tayo learns what to accept and what to reject for his survival. (CM)
Descriptors: Alienation, American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians
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Bell, Robert C. – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
All stories, ceremonies, and rituals are attempts to confer "totality" or structure on experience; ordinarily unrelated objects and events are given definite connection. In "Ceremony," the disjointed parts are refocused through the traditional hoop symbol and converge in a circular pattern of restoration and genuine renewal.…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Cultural Background, Cultural Influences
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Swan, Edith – American Indian Quarterly, 1988
Outlines the Laguna (Pueblo) symbolic geography or world view as it is woven into Leslie Silko's novel "Ceremony." Explains the protagonist's spiritual journey toward health and harmony in terms of symbols and beliefs in Laguna mythology. Contains 21 references. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Beliefs
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Scarberry, Susan J. – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Because of his mixed blood and his war experiences, Tayo feels displaced and estranged. Reoccurring bad memories have impaired his ability to function. He has forgotten the old stories which serve as guides to growth. His eventual recollection of the old stories is instrumental in effecting his healing. (CM)
Descriptors: Alienation, American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians
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Jahner, Elaine – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Mythic (stated in poetic form) and contemporary (stated in prose) narrative shapes the events of "Ceremony." Medicine Man Betonie teaches Tayo to relate cause to effect through story. Tayo must bring the meaning of changed life experiences to the way he feels the story. (CM)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Cultural Background
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Allen, Paula Gunn – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Focuses on the fundamental Native American idea that the land and the people are the same. Tayo's illness, a result of separation of person and land, is healed by their reunification. This is accomplished when Tayo makes ancient and new stories real in his actions (the Ceremony). (CM)
Descriptors: Alienation, American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians
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Sands, Kathleen M., Ed.; Ruoff, A. Lavonne, Ed. – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Seminar participants discuss the novel "Ceremony" as a curing ceremony, the function of memory in the novel, and the distinctly American Indian aspects of the novel (role of animals, circular images, ritual, mythology, Laguna cultural traditions, and use of oral tradition). (CM)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Cultural Background
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Evers, Larry – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Silko demonstrates that writing "American Indian" and being "American Indian" is a matter of process rather than ethnographic and historical fact. Members of American Indian communities are shaped by the telling of stories and shape others by telling stories. To write "American Indian" is to tell stories of belonging.…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Cultural Activities, Cultural Background
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Swan, Edith – American Indian Quarterly, 1988
Analyzes the use of Laguna symbolic geography and Laguna and Navajo mythology in the ceremonies that heal and revitalize Tayo, the alienated hero of Leslie Silko's novel "Ceremony." Describes the sunwise cycle through the four cardinal directions and the aspects of each direction. Contains 29 references. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Ceremonies
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Velie, Alan R. – American Indian Quarterly, 1984
Studies mythic dimension of protagonists in novels by American Indian authors Scott Momaday and James Welch. Illustrates discrepancies between White readers' beliefs about Indians and Indian myths of the trickster and how mythologies affect interpretation of the novels. Contrasts use of myth by Indian authors Leslie Silko and Gerald Vizenor. (LFL)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Cultural Differences
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Mitchell, Carol – American Indian Quarterly, 1979
Myth and ritual, the basis of the Ceremony, are crucial to Tayo's reidentification with nature. Traditional Laguna stories parallel Tayo's story and provide continuity between ancient ritual and Tayo's own on-going ceremony. Ritual is vital to Tayo's cure. (CM)
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians
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Kuokkanen, Rauna – American Indian Quarterly, 2003
Educational institutions have played a central role in colonizing Indigenous peoples. The colonial school system has also been a very effective tool in implementing racist theories and indoctrinating them in children (Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike) worldwide. In this paper, the author demonstrates how, despite the vast differences in actual…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Boarding Schools, Coping, Novels