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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Gregorio Lopez y Fuentes' 1937 novel El Indio strives to represent many things at once: political mistreatment, ethnic intolerance and cultural ignorance. While on the surface the story appears as yet another narration with regard to Western European overtaking of Indian land, it is significantly much more than that. Indeed, there exists plenty of references – both obvious and subliminal – that effectively address what truly did occur between the colonists and the indigenous population; however, the writer discusses that through the author's insight, the reader gains a considerable amount of knowledge about what occurred during this clash of culture. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCindio.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
While on the surface the story appears as yet another narration with regard to Western European overtaking of Indian land, it is significantly much more than that. Indeed, there
exists plenty of references - both obvious and subliminal - that effectively address what truly did occur between the colonists and the indigenous population; however, through the authors insight, the
reader gains a considerable amount of knowledge about what occurred during this clash of culture. At the forefront of Lopez y Fuentes struggle
to understand why there was such a lack of communication between and among the people is the vast cultural misunderstandings that served to do nothing more than deepen each sides
alienation of the other. The ravages faced by Indian peoples due to the supposed forward movement of civilization and progress allows the reader to better understand the significant lack
of consciousness on the part of the Europeans. Indeed, Lopez y Fuentes utilizes a generalized backdrop when it comes to the time frame of his story, which one can
readily equate with any indigenous peoples throughout history who were stripped of their rightful land. The Mexican Revolution stands out as a prominent historical landmark, even though the author
does not employ the use of obvious character names or recognizable places. Clearly, El Indio touches upon centuries of subjugation, racism, ethnocentrism, cultural
superiority, as well as a fundamental yet blatant disregard for all human life. Lopez y Fuentes book demonstrates the fact that being a Mexican Indian was not conducive to a
happy life by effectively documenting the struggles faced trying to incorporate into the White Mans world; forced to abandon their innate heritage, the author descriptively portrays an existence fraught with
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