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This section contains 641 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
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The Grass Dancer Critical Essay #2
In the following review, Henighan asserts that The Grass Dancer "reassembles the history of the Sioux Indians . . . with disarming equanimity. "
The act of reclaiming a lost or suppressed cultural identity is often carried out with defiance. Histories that have been denigrated or marginalized tend to be reborn in the contentious language of rebellion. Susan Power's first novel, The Grass Dancer, set on a North Dakota reservation, reassembles the history of the Sioux Indiansa term Power seems to prefer to the currently favoured "Native Americans" with disarming equanimity.
Four weeks before Harley Wind Soldier's birth, his father and brother are killed by a drunken driver. The driver is white, and, though Power makes little of this detail, the accident epitomizes the offhand way in which, throughout this novel, white society wipes out the Indian past more through carelessness than malice. Harley's mother, traumatized by the...
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This section contains 641 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
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