English III
Ms. Fordahl
2/04/14
In the past
couple of weeks we have been talking and learning about native voices and creation stories. We read a couple of
stories and watched a PBS video. The stories were written by Scott Momaday and
Louise Erdrich. The story names were Way to Rainy Mountain and Saint Marie. In
the next paragraphs I’m going to talk about how the native people have
relationships with their land they live on or were born and raised on.
In the story Way to Rainy Mountain,
author Momaday describes the land where his grandmother lived and where he grew
up as a child. He describes the oral
tradition in his tribe and how his elders lived a long time ago. Here is an
example of Momaday describing the land, “A single Knoll rises out of the plain
in Oklahoma, north and west of the Wichita Range.” He says in the story that
his people are a landmark and gave the land the name Rainy Mountain. This
relationship with the land in this story resembles the relationship in the next
story Saint Marie.
In the story Saint Marie, Louise
Erdrich describes the land of where she grew up as a child. In my opinion this
story was like a yellow woman story.
In the story there is a nun that is a trickster
in the story that tricks the little girl into believing she is possessed. An
example about the land out of the story is “Recently a windbreak was planted
before the bar for the purposes of tornado insurance.” In the next paragraph
I’m going to talk about how I have a relationship with the land.
I have a relationship with the land
because of my job. My job is to be a beekeeper. I work on a bee farm and you
need pollen from the land for the bees to make honey. The honey is extracted
from the bees onto hives and then is extracted from the hives into a condenser
which cleans and thins the honey, to make it able to sell. So that is why I have
a relationship with the land.
So in the story, Way to Rainy
Mountain it talks about the land that Momaday lives on and where he grew
up. In Saint Marie she talks about where
she lives and what the people and conditions were like there. In conclusion the
stories and I both have relationships with the land.
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