Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Heritage as an Idea of Oneself in Bless Me Ultima and The Lone Ranger a
Heritage as an Idea of Oneself in arouse Me Ultima and The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven Traveling through humanity is a never-ending story. Traveling through ethnicity is an ever changing journey. Is race or culture a matter of color? Is it a direction of life or a decision an individual makes? Is it an idea one has of themselves? In the novels, Bless Me Ultima (Anaya 1972) and The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven (Alexie 1993), cardinal different minority characters, Tony and Victor, give voice to their journey of growing up and finding their place in the world in regards to their heritage. The characters, in Anayas and Alexies novels, relate to a dominant culture, pursue balance in their life by searching traditions of the past, and attempt to blend their heritage into the present allowing them passage to the future. Their journeys differ in gaze to heritage and family situation. Their journeys parallel considering that they be both male, be want to a minority, seek individual identity, and search for their place on the planet. Each seeks peace within and without. Although, their journeys are different, they are the same. The characters in the two novels, belong to two different cultures. In Rudolfo Anayas Bless Me Ultima, the young, Mexican-American Anthony Juan Marez y Luna (Tony) struggles between two ways of being a Spanish-Mexican-American era also dealing with the dominant white culture. Tonys mother and father, although both born in New Mexico, come from two different cultures. His father, a Marez, comes from a long line of Spanish conquistadores, men as restless as the seas they sailed and as free as the land they conquered (Anaya 6). Tonys mother, a Luna, comes fr... ... America, 1982. 80-167. Meacham, Jon. Redefining Race in America. Newsweek September 2000 38-41. Mitchell, Carol. Rudolfo Anayas Bless Me, Ultima Folk Culture in Literature. Critique Studies in Modern Fiction. 17.1 1980, 55-64. Smoke Signals. Dir. Ch ris Eyre. With Adam Beach and Evan Adams. Miramax/Shadowcatcher. Prod. Larry Estes and Scott Rosenfelt. 1997. Tonn, Horst. Bless Me, Ultima A Fictional Response to Times of Transition. Aztlan, 18.1 1987, 59-68. White, Craig. American Minority Literature. Handout. University of Houston-Clear Lake. Houston. 24 August 2000. - - - - - American Minority Literature. Notes. 27 September 2000. Yancey, William L. Ericksen, Eugene P. and Juliani, Richard N. Emergent Ethnicity A Review and Reformulation. American Sociological Review 41.3 1976 391-403.
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