Author: Leslie
Silko—part Laguna Pueblo and White.
Setting: In the
Laguna Pueblo reservation mostly.
Main Characters:
Tayo: He is the main character in the novel. He was left to
live with Auntie and Robert at the age of 4. Throughout his life he struggles
with finding that he truly is. He is half white, and have Pueblo. He goes off
to war and comes home with some major PTSD (vomit everywhere). He can’t be
cured with the medicine found in the Pueblo Laguna tribe, so he ventures to
find medicine from the white culture, thus pulling the two sides together.
Auntie: She is very “white”. She doesn’t treat Tayo very
well, and she kind of just cares about appearances and superficial things.
Josiah: Tayo’s father figure, Tayo is very upset about his
death. Josiah raises the cattle. He also is all for the Pueblo culture.
Rocky: Has been assimilated into the white culture. He is
very well liked by all of them, and kind of turns his back on Pueblo culture.
Grandma: Kind of just goes with the flow doesn’t really care.
Harley: Tayo’s friend who went to war with him. He came back
with a drinking problem, not PTSD.
Emo: Tayo’s childhood acquaintance. Him and Tayo don’t like
each other much, and he attacks him at a bar for saying white people are better
than Pueblos.
Plot:
The
book opens with Tayo and his grief for his newly lost “bros” Rocky and Josiah. There
is also a drought in the Pueblo reservation and now Tayo believes that this is
his fault. He is struggling with that assumption for some time. He throws up
all the time, and this is because of his PTSD problem that needs to be fixed.
He stays at home with Auntie, Robert, and Grandma since his mother abandoned
him at the age of 4. His father is white, but he doesn’t have any idea who
exactly his father is.
When
Tayo does return from the war, he realizes that his other friends are also
going through the same sickness problems as he is, yet they handle it a
different way: through alcohol. They don’t realize that this is a temporary
solution though, and it really does a lot more harm than they think. Because of
this, Grandma calls in the Pueblo medicine man, Ku’oosh, and he performs a
ceremony that does very little help to Tayo. Auntie really doesn’t like Tayo,
and we can see throughout the novel that she wishes he had died instead of
Rocky.
The
summer that they got enlisted in the army, Josiah bought some cattle. Night
Swan, his companion, encourages this idea. Then, another medicine man is called
in on behalf of curing Tayo, Betonie. He is more connected with the white
culture. Tayo then leaves to find the cattle and to complete the new ceremony,
yet he finds them in the mountain. Then, he runs into T’seh and spends almost
the whole summer with her. Then, he is told that Emo and his other friends are
causing problems back in the reservation, and they are blaming it on Tayo and
telling the police.
To
get away from the police, he follows T’sehs advice. He realizes that to
complete the ceremony, he has to hide in a minefield that he has come across to
add the element of white culture. Emo and his friends are there and Emo tries
to get him to come out of his hiding spot by torturing Harvey. Tayo doesn’t
fall for it though, and returns to Ku’oosh to tell him what have happened.
Ku’oosh then says he has been cured, and the ceremony ends.
Theme:
A big theme in this book is that you have to balance
cultures in your life, but you can’t just pick one. You always need the equal
balance. Tayo is the perfect example of this. He clearly can’t just live off of
Indian culture, or just white. He needs both of the medicine men in his life.
Narrator: 3rd
person
Symbols/motifs:
Speckles on cattle: represent stars or Tayo’s mixed
cultures.
Colors/directions: show how detail is very important in his
life
Alcohol: shows how it can’t be the only cure, its only
temporary.
Quotes:
1.
“Nothing was all good or all bad either; it all
depended.” This quote shows how not one thing is purely all good or all bad.
You have to look at everything in multiple ways, that’s just how life works. You
can’t completely categorize things as all good and all bad.
2.
“It seems like I already heard these stories
before—only thing is, the name sounds different.” Grandma says this and it
really reinforces the idea of reciprocity in the Indian culture. Everything is
the same story, just repeated differently. She is connecting the past and
present all in one.
Julia,
ReplyDeleteyou do a very thorough job here. I would say, though, that it's not so much Tayo gets medicine from white culture as is cured through "medicine" that understands white culture. Betonie isn't an emblem of white culture in my eyes, but he understands the need for a new ceremony in light of the white culture.
I really like your ideas in the symbols question!
Hey Julia,
ReplyDeleteNice job on this post! I really liked the theme you wrote about. That was definitely one of the most important themes in the book. I hadn't realized the symbol about the speckles on the cattle so I'm glad you included it.