Sunday, January 28, 2007

European American Dreams I

The Europeans came to America because they sought freedom in the form of freedom of religion and freedom from the monarchial tyranny of Europe. There is also a strong dose of working to reach your full potential in the dreams of European Americans -- that was one of the principles covered in Tocqueville's writings. The other in respect to self-advancement was never giving up. Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote about the subject of self-reliance while trusting one's inner voice.

This bullet pointed list of European American dream elements is still relevant with all Americans to this day:

*Freedom
*Religion
*Self-advancement
*Never giving up
*Individualism
*self-reliance

We read John Winthrop's A Modell of Christian Charity, and I found it ironic that Europeans were coming to America to find religious freedom, yet tried to convert the Native Americans to believing in their God. Winthrop valued basic ideals such as building community, frugality, and that all men treat each other equally via the same code of moral conduct.

As we read Crevecoeur and watched The New World, time and time again the same themes kept popping up of freedom. The early settlers wanted their freedom of choice. That meant freedom of religion blended into a new social system. The American dream back then was to own land -- and it still is today though more specifically it is now to own a house.

The Reason Americans Came Here in the First Place


Some ideas stand the test of time...

Friday, January 26, 2007

Why we play basketball, by Sherman Alexie

Imagine if things had gone much different in the colonial days...

Essential elements of Native American Dreams

As we examine the American dream in literature and film for MET IS 360, we began the course with a look at Native American dreams.

We read Joy Harjo’s poem Reconciliation – A Prayer, Sherman Alexie’s The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven and viewed Pow Wow Highway as our film. The themes that run throughout include religion, valuing the tribe over the individual, hope, despair, alcoholism, carrying on tradition, racism, and blending of cultures.

Religion
The God of the Native Americans believes in respecting Mother Earth and religious practices aren’t as filled with as much hypocrisy as those of America’s European settlers. Important imagery in Pow Wow Highway to illustrate this was when Philbert bought his “pony” to begin his spiritual journey. He gets into the car and rips the Virgin Mary from the dashboard and throws her out the window. At that point, his true spiritual quest begins.

Tribe
It was clear from the readings and the film that Native American dreams center around the tribe, which is given a higher regard than the individual. Whereas we are often caught up in the “it’s all about me” way of modern American society, the Native Americans think less about that and more about the good of the tribe.

Hope
Everyone has hope of a better tomorrow in all cultures. For the Native Americans in Alexie’s stories, that hope is that the next hot basketball player each year will make it and leave the reservation as a college basketball star or professional athlete. The hope is always that the next generation will break the cycle.

Despair
The despair comes from negative experiences on an economic and social level on the reservation. After encountering underemployment and watching their traditions suffer, a healthy dose of despair is warranted.

Alcoholism
Drinking to forget is a theme in both Pow Wow Highway and The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven. Pow Wow Highway reminded me a lot of Jack Kerouac's On The Road mostly because of the diverse characters finding themselves in different scenes in a spontaneous fashion. Even the publishing of On The Road was the realization of the American dream because it took Kerouac years to get it published. When it finally was, it met much success!

Racism
The mute child, James, in Powwow Highway is met with the stigma that Indian children are slow whenever Victor takes him to the doctor to find out why he hasn’t spoken yet. The police in Powwow Highway are racist and corrupt.


Blending of Cultures
The Native Americans in all the film and literature we covered were fighting to uphold their traditions while also carving out their place in life outside the reservation. At times the two cultures blended while other times they conflicted. Buddy Red Bow in Pow Wow Highway doesn’t think Indians should be moving away from the reservation. But at the same time, he’ll blend cultures when we see him wearing a traditional Cheyenne necklace with a U.S. military purple heart hanging off of it.

We saw the blending of culture once again during our study of Spanish-American dreams. I call it 'duality' because a person has to switch between cultures going back and forth between languages and between sets of traditions.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Welcome to my conceptual map for MET IS 360

This will serve as my conceptual map project for MET IS 360 OL: Literature, Film & The American Dream.