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  • "'You cannot assimilate Indian ghosts' : a magical realist reading of Louise Erdrich's The Night Watchman"

    Author(s):
    Amel Abbady (see profile)
    Date:
    2021
    Group(s):
    Historiography, LLC 20th- and 21st-Century American, LLC Indigenous Literatures of the United States and Canada, TC History and Literature, TM Literary and Cultural Theory
    Subject(s):
    Indigenous peoples, Indians of North America, Magic realist fiction, Historical fiction
    Item Type:
    Article
    Tag(s):
    Louise Erdrich, ghost, magical realism, boarding schools, Termination
    Permanent URL:
    https://doi.org/10.17613/c9g2-8556
    Abstract:
    In The Night Watchman (2020), Louise Erdrich continues to blur the lines between history and fiction as she has done in several of her novels. Erdrich introduces the reader to several magical elements that appear to be entirely real: two ghosts, a dog that talks, and an unearthly powwow with Jesus as one of the dancers. The main objective of this article is to show how Erdrich's adoption of a magical realist narrative mode grants her the authority to challenge "the orthodox version of history" (Holgate 2015: 635) and to "re-envision" Native American history from the perspective of "the dispossessed, the silenced, and the marginalized" (Slemon 1995: 422). In particular, this article investigates the characterization and function of one of the two ghosts that appear in the novel in the context of two significant eras in the history of Native Americans: off-reservation boarding schools and the termination policy of the 1950s.
    Metadata:
    xml
    Published as:
    Journal article     Show details
    Pub. DOI:
    10.5817/BSE2021-2-3
    Publisher:
    Masaryk University
    Pub. Date:
    2021
    Journal:
    Brno Studies in English
    Volume:
    47
    Issue:
    2
    Page Range:
    31 - 43
    ISSN:
    1805-0867 (online)
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    1 year ago
    License:
    Attribution

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