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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(5 pp). N. Scott Momaday and Sherman Alexie are
Native American writers who "connect" with those
they love. For Momaday it is the love of land -
that unique place where one is born, that is both
defining and healing. For Alexie it is the love
of self and others as they really are - that same
intense love which can be viewed as anger, if one
is not aware of the passion involved or the
connection of the two. Bibliography lists 3
sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBmomalx.doc
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others as they really are - that same intense love which can be viewed as anger, if one is not aware of the passion involved or the connection of the
two. Bibliography lists 3 Bbmomalx.doc MOMADAY & ALEXIE: WRITERS WHO CONNECT Written by B. Bryan Babcock for the
Paperstore, Inc., March 2001 Introduction N. Scott Momaday and Sherman Alexie are Native American writers who "connect" with those they love. For Momaday it is the love
of land - that unique place where one is born, that is both defining and healing. For Alexie it is the love of self and others as they really
are - that same intense love which can be viewed as anger, if one is not aware of the passion involved or the connection of the two. N. Scott Momaday
- House Made of Dawn - 1966 This Pulitzer award-winning novel begins: "Dypaloh. There was a house made of dawn. It was made of pollen and of rain,
and the land was very old and everlasting. There were many colors on the hills, and the plain was bright with different-colored clays and sands. Red and blue
spotted horse grazed on the plain, and there was a dark wildness on the mountains beyond. The land was still and strong. It was beautiful all around" (1).
One cannot help but be struck, by not only Momadays lyrical use of language, but also his love of the land itself. For Momaday, love of the land is cyclic
and nourishing. In the place of ones birth one can be healed from the difficulties of the past, but first one must endure. Momaday s writing itself, cycles
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