Friday, January 24, 2020
Identity in House Made of Dawn Essay -- House Made of Dawn Essays
Identity in House Made of Dawn      Ã     Ã   In 1969 N. Scott Momaday  won the Pulitzer Prize for his phenomenal work, House Made of Dawn.Ã   The  novel addresses the issue of identity, how it can be lost as well as  recovered.Ã   Momaday offers insightful methods of recovering or attaining  one's identity. Momaday once made the following now famous statement:      Ã       We are what we imagine.Ã   Our very existence consists in our imagination  of ourselves.Ã   Our best destiny is to imagine, at least, completely, who  and what, and that we are.Ã   The greatest tragedy that can befall us is to  go unimagined (Owens, 93).     Ã       For Momaday, imagination is the key to identity, and it is this key that  Momaday offers as a solution to the problem of identity in House Made of  Dawn.Ã   Momaday's protagonist, Abel, cannot imagine who he is.Ã   In  chronicling Abel's effort to regain his ability to imagine, Momaday offers  inextricably intertwined methods to regain one's 'imagination'.      Ã       Ã  Ã   Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The  prologue of House Made of Dawn begins with the word 'Dypaloh'. This word signals  a shift into the Native American oral tradition. Traditionally, storytelling  have definite responsibilities.Ã   According to Louis Owens in Other  Destinies, the responsibilities are:Ã   "to tell us who we are and where we  come from, make us whole and heal us, to integrate us fully within the world in  which we live and make that world inhabitable, to compel order and reality"  (93).Ã   In defining the responsibilities of storytelling, Owens also gives a  description of the 'identified individual', one who has a strong sense of  identity and is fully self-imagined.Ã   The identified individual knows were  he is from and where he is going.Ã   He is not fragmented, and k...              ...motion.Ã   Running is  perseverance.Ã   Running is believing that identity can be recovered.Ã    If Abel did not believe it possible to find his proper place, he would already  by lost, stagnant, still waiting.Ã   Running is action.Ã   Stories are  also action.Ã   They are inherently active in passing on crucial  knowledge.Ã   A story that is not told, that is not related, can have no  meaning.Ã   Stories show the proper order of reality.Ã   Both running and  stories are crucial elements in Abel's recovering his identity.Ã   The things  they represent, motion, perseverance, order, and knowledge, are crucial in  anyone's quest for identity, not just Native peoples, but the people of the  human race.            Works Cited:      Momaday, N. Scott.Ã   House Made of Dawn. New  York: Harper and Row, 1968.      Owens, Louis.Ã   Other Destinies.  Univ. of  Oklahoma Press:  Norman and  London, 1992                       
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