Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Relationship Between Form and Content within N. Scott Momaday’s Works “House Made of Dawn” and “The Way to Rainy Mountain”
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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 6 page paper discussing form and content in works of N. Scott Momaday. N. Scott Momaday, a Native American writer who first won the Pulitzer Prize in 1969 has a unique presentation within his works. In “House Made of Dawn” (1968) Momaday relates the story of Abel, a young Jemez Pueblo Indian returning from World War II and who goes about a journey of self-discovery in which Momaday intermingles Abel’s imaginative thoughts, mythical stories and reality throughout. In “The Way to Rainy Mountain” (1969) an autobiographical collection, Momaday recounts his own journey back to Rainy Mountain through a series of poems, legends, drawings and historical facts about the Kiowa Indians. In both works, Momaday uses a fragmented format which reflects the fragmentation of the content which is occurring within the central characters. This fragmentation gradually comes together by the end of each work to present the reader and the characters with a sense of the “whole” person used to describe Abel and Momaday in their journeys of return and self-discovery.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_TJMomad1.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
has a unique presentation within his works. In "House Made of Dawn" (1968) Momaday relates the story of Abel, a young Jemez Pueblo Indian returning from World War II and
who goes about a journey of self-discovery in which Momaday intermingles Abels imaginative thoughts, mythical stories and reality throughout. In "The Way to Rainy Mountain" (1969) an autobiographical collection, Momaday
recounts his own journey back to Rainy Mountain through a series of poems, legends, drawings and historical facts about the Kiowa Indians. In both works, Momaday uses a fragmented format
which reflects the fragmentation of the content which is occurring within the central characters. This fragmentation gradually comes together by the end of each work to present the reader and
the characters with a sense of the "whole" person used to describe Abel and Momaday in their journeys of return and self-discovery. When
N. Scott Momaday, a young unknown painter, poet and scholar won the Pulitzer Prize for his first novel, "House Made of Dawn" in 1969, it opened up the literary world
to the works of Native American authors. The awarding of this novel brought a long overdue recognition to Native American literature, poetry and essays which had long since been regarded
from an anthropological or historical perspective rather than a literary genre and reflects the 1960s commitment to human rights and cultural recognition (Roemer, 2002).
"House Made of Dawn" fulfilled a much needed gap in the literary teachings of the American school system as it provided an understanding of the "other" from within
this society and incorporated historical significance of the Native American. The novel was a combination of oral and written literatures and a combination of New Mexican and urban environments which
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