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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses racial discord and homosexual intolerance as they relate to hatred in "The Laramie Project" and "Indian Killer." Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCLaramie.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
primary basis upon which hatred is experienced in this story is from the long-standing undercurrent of racial discord between Native Americans and the white man who razed their people and
threw them off their land. That a serial murderer is systematically taking the lives of white men - brutally scalping them, in fact - is the first indication of how
the characters perpetuate this racial hatred. John Smith, a Native American at heart but white man by upbringing, represents another way in which hatred is displayed throughout the story
by way of his association with Marie, an Indian objector who sees red whenever Jack Wilson - a self-proclaimed half Native American - is brought to her attention. But
perhaps the glue that keeps all this rising racial hatred at its apex is the bigoted radio disc jockey who constantly stirs the agitation by provoking whites to seek revenge.
"...Tensions mount, Smith fights to slake the anger that engulfs him...and the Indian Killer claims yet another life" (Indian Killer). The result
of this cyclical behavior illustrates how generations upon generations have been - for lack of a better word - brainwashed into believing that the white race is far superior to
all others. Reprogramming such ingrained concepts is not something that will ever be carried through in any short amount of time; in fact, each step forward toward a modicum
of cultural harmony is often met with a significant force of resistance from those who believe white privilege is the manner by which the world was constructed. Clearly, it
is racisms ignorant legacy that continues to drive the wedge even further in this story, exemplify Alexies point that myriad Native Americans still harbor deep resentment for what happened centuries
...