Even though the novel House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday is a fictional story‚ it also can serve as a sort of ethnography for modern Native Americans. Momaday writes the book in a form that makes more sense when read out loud. This mirrors the value that Native Americans place on oral tradition. The various priests in the story also tell several stories from Native American tradition and they are passed along in this way in the book. Native Americans place great value in stories and this
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chapter would stay intact because these essays and photographs inspired many responses from my classmates. Due to the responses‚ we were provided with openings for discussions. Therefore‚ I would conserve everything up to‚” The Photograph” by N. Scott Momaday‚ page 252-254. Also all the context from “The Photograph” until‚ the essay by Frank Fournier would be preserved. I feel all of these photos and essays have meaning that we all can relate to and not just a few. They all provided that we think
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The Way to Rainy Mountain In Scott Momaday’s introductory paragraph of “The Way to Rainy Mountain” he uses figurative language to show his love for the land in Oklahoma. As a Kiowa‚ he describes the land with such intimacy‚ that it seems as if he owns the land and he is one with the land. He starts the paragraph with a descriptive image of the Wichita Range: “A single knoll rises out of the plain in Oklahoma”. He describes the weather with extreme exaggeration‚ “winter brings blizzards‚ hot tornadic
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The Way to Rainy Mountain The title of N. Scott Momaday’s "The Way to Rainy Mountain" encapsulates the theme of a journey that permeates the story. In the story‚ a young man journeys to the grave of his grandmother along the same route that her people‚ the Kiowas‚ took across America before settling on the southern Plains. The young man’s grandmother had never undergone the journey that she so often told stories about‚ and yet she seemed to have experienced it through the memories of others that
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Richard Gallot On February 5th‚ 1992‚ I‚ Richard Joseph Gallot‚ was born at two fifteen in the morning‚ at St. Francis Medical Center. I am the son of Rick Gallot and Tammy Johnston and I am the only child. As an infant‚ I lived in Grambling‚ Louisiana‚ on one forty one Gallot drive. For about the next two years‚ my parents developed issues with each other. Then‚ at the age of two years old‚ my parents divorced. My father got custody of me and continued living in Grambling while my mother moved
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Immersed and Enlightened Mitch Graf Comp. Religion 2370 Amy Picknell September 24‚ 2012 Prelude: Originally I had my TA‚ Amy Picknell sign me up for the KTC visit on Sunday September 16th. However‚ I unfortunately had to go to an unexpected funeral on that Saturday and Sunday so I wasn’t able to go to the KTC meditation. I ended up leaving Columbus Friday night and on my way down I kept looking and looking for places to visit and couldn’t find anything. Then‚ out of nowhere I noticed some
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C/C Although both D. Brown (I) and N. S. Momaday (II) clearly describe the extreme weather conditions at the Oklahoma landmark‚ especially during the summer; Brown essentially states his observations while‚ Momaday romanticized his view of the landscape‚ which altered their perceptions. In the first passage‚ written by D. Brown uses laconic diction and vivid imagery to make the scenery more realistic and simple. First‚ Brown immediately begins by saying what the problem is. The author declares in line one
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The short works Reading the River by Mark Twain‚ and The Way to Rainy Mountain by N. Scott Momaday‚ are personal tales of moments in the authors lives and how those experiences impacted them spiritually. The central theme of both essays is that of impressing upon the reader to be careful not to take everyday life for granted. Both authors accomplish this mission by relying on examples from nature‚ but Momaday goes a step farther and incorporates his Native American heritage into the explanation of
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The brutal treatment of the native americans is a stain on american history. N. Scott Momaday’s grandmother lived closely after that time‚ so she knew both times of her people’s lives‚ but was not broken by the change. Momaday wrote his essay‚ The Way to Rainy Mountain to remember his heritage and to remind his audience of a dying culture. Momaday’s essay begins with a description of Rainy Mountain‚ home to his tribe‚ the Kiowas‚ followed by a short history about how they were driven from their
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Momaday uses this memoir to document‚ not only the end of his grandmother’s life‚ but also the “end” of several ways of life for the Kiowa people by constructing this world for the reader as if the reader had been there himself. Momaday begins his memoir with strong and descriptive word choice illustrating Rainy Mountain. Each sentence acting as a brushstroke in the reader’s mind‚ the paragraph painting an elaborate picture‚ the reader feels as if he has been dropped into the setting. Momaday then
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