• Research Paper on:
    From the Glittering World by Irvin Morris and Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko

    Number of Pages: 5

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    In five pages character similarities regarding native cultural views are compared with respect to these works with additional contrasts and comparisons between Morris's Coyote and Silko's Tayo. Five sources are cited in the bibliography.

    Name of Research Paper File: D0_TJSilko1.rtf

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    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    Morris. In both novels, the characters have been exposed to the white mans world and have to learn how to accept the changes and influences it has had upon their  culture. The character of Tayo in "Ceremony" has a great deal of difficulty accepting the white mans culture and his own and becomes physically and mentally ill because it. Morris  tells of his story and how he and his people have learned to accept the white mans influence on their own and it is this acceptance which let them continue  a strong survival. He tells a traditional story of an egocentric Coyote who because of his separatist nature becomes disturbed and violent. Tayo, undergoing a similar egocentrism, eventually learns how  to accept the mixture of the two cultures in the character of Betonie. When Tayo returns to his Pueblo culture suffering post traumatic  stress syndrome from World War II, he has already experienced a disappointment in his expectations of his white experience. Tayo expected to be accepted into the white culture when he  joined the army with his friends, Rocky and Emo, and was told by the recruiter, "Anyone can fight for America, even you boys" (Silko, 1977, 25). Reality hit however as  Rocky was killed, Emo became an alcoholic and Tayos condition was left uncured by white medicine (Austgen, 2002). Tayo again has experiences which are unexpected when he listens to  the tales of his cultures wanting traditional relationships between the earth and the deities and the elders only relate modernized stories to him about the magic and witchery of the  present world. Tayo feels a great deal of frustration when the elders veer away from the traditional stories and replace them with darker stories of witchery. Tayo has a difficult 

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