YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Leslie Marmon Silko
Essays 1 - 30
In six pages this paper examines how 'home' and 'self' are conceptually depicted in Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko and Beloved by...
In four pages this novel is summarized and reviewed....
In five pages this paper considers the customs and rituals of Native American culture and their influence on child development as ...
In five pages this paper examines the metaphorical significance of the desert and its magical qualities for Native Americans in Le...
In four pages this paper examines the importance of Native American heritage and the protagonist's desire to reconnect in the nove...
In seven pages this paper examines Tayo's Indian community reassimilation in Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony. There are no other s...
In seven pages these novels are compared in terms of how each features the Native American identity struggle with similarities and...
the road to female freedom and self-expression has been paved with patriarchal intolerance and characteristic skepticism so much s...
notes, "Silko reveals that living in Laguna society as a mixed blood from a prominent family caused her a lot of pain. It meant b...
there is the father, a man who feels a deep connection with the past, and perhaps more importantly, the Mexican Revolution. It is ...
right in their eyes for one who has died. They paint his face, sprinkle corn meal and pollen, and thus give him a very fitting wra...
complete of his sense of self - everything within his environment has the feeling of being "other." Tayo is literally the walking ...
returning home only to find his friends drunk and lost to the world. He essentially needs healing and he can only find healing thr...
he feels totally disconnected from the world - everything is "other." This disconnection from reality is integrally tied to the ea...
with Tayos Indian heritage. Prior to describing Tayos chanted curse of the jungle rain, Silko relates a Pueblo myth about Reed Wom...
alienated himself from Mother Earth in his anger and frustration, cursing the jungle rain, which "grew like foliage from the sky."...
be a reality and that violence is often something that stems from such conditions as seen in the experiences of Tayo. Anger and ...
point Silko goes on to illustrate how she was taught, by her father, how to use guns, how to hunt, and how to always protect herse...
In seven pages this paper examines Silko's novel from a historical context in an analysis of what Ceremony reveals about the latte...
only permitted slavery, but found it acceptable, and the economic reasons which perpetrated the condition for so long. To the mode...
Rocky was killed, Emo became an alcoholic and Tayos condition was left uncured by white medicine (Austgen, 2002). Tayo again has...
visit time and again, or which makes the reader have a strange sense of foreboding for the characters as the story unravels. Autho...
and a generation of the Pueblo men have been damaged by their participation in the war (Austgen). While Tayo and his two friends, ...
it is as much a story about the Earth as it is a story about the human characters that strive to seek resolution to the very real ...
This 10 page paper compares and contrasts the novel Beloved by African- American author Toni Morrison and Ceremony, by Native Amer...
In five pages this paper examines the themes of memory and reassimilation within the context of these Native American novels. The...
different things that the white man had done, but the point of the novel in regards to Tayo was to get beyond any kind of blame. T...
This is an essay of 5 pages that argues that Silko employs literary devices and the characterization of Tayo to dramatize the spir...
it, because he cannot really define who and what he is. Like many Native Americans, his world has clashed headlong into the world ...
the doctors that he felt like "white smoke" and that he had "no consciousness" (Silko 14). With this allusion, Tayo tried to conve...