The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is a story about Arnold with brain damage and many conflicts. Arnold is different then other people in his tribe.He has a massive head, and his feet are gigantic. As Arnold grows older a teacher persuades him to leave his home in order to go to a different school. By going to this other school Arnold will become successful then most people in his tribe. Arnold has a talent that not many people in his tribe have. He is a great cartoonist with a big imagination. “He says he likes to draw, because…words are too unpredictable.” and “I draw because words are too limited.” ( pg.5) If someone talked you in a different language and you didn’t know what they were saying, how would you ever know what they meant? Drawings can be identified by most people and easily understood. Some people wish that drawings could take the place of real items. Arnolds knows that “No matter how good I am, my drawings will never take the place of food or money.” His parents don’t have much money, so he dreamed of what he did not have much of and if he could draw anything and make it real, he would. In his geometry class, he gets a book that had his mom name on it. They had the book since his mom was in high school! This made Arnold …show more content…
A few weeks past when his grandma was killed by a drunk driver. Her last words were to forgive the diver. Then, his dad’s friend gets shot in the head after fighting for the last bottle of beer. Finally, his sister dies in her husband's trailer when the curtain caught on fire and burned down the trailer. During his sister's funeral, he sprinted away into the woods only to find his friend Rowdy crying. Rowdy told him that Arnold killed his sister by leaving home and going to a different school. His mother slapped him making him promise never to drink. Arnold missed a lot of school, and most students don’t recall him going to
When his mother goes to the big beach and leaves him in the bay, which he calls his own beach. Jerry and his mother’s relationship is confusing because she wants him to stay with him but yet again she wants him to go explore without her. This makes it complicated for Jerry to go through
In the novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian By Sherman Alexie, the main character of this book: Arnold Spirit goes through a journey of loss throughout his family and friendships as he transitions from a school near his home where he is like everyone else, to a more privileged school farther away from his home in order to receive a better education and better future for himself. Events play out throughout his life that cause great grief for himself and his family. When he transitioned schools it strained the relationship between him and his best friend that caused a loss between themselves. Another form of loss he experienced was the death of a family friend, his grandmother, and his sister. In the beginning of the story he was bullied all his life because of the condition he had.
Willy Loman and Walter Lee Younger are two different people, in two different worlds with almost the same type of problems. The struggles between the Younger and Lomans is quite a twist for some people but if given a chance can be unraveled to see how much love and care is actually put into the meaning of family. First is Willy and how his life is being changed by his memory and struggle to keep up on payments. Second is Walter struggling with his drinking problem and trying to keep his temper in check to tell a certain white man to leave and that they are keeping the house they bought. Lastly is the difference in their struggles that they have to face in order to survive and handle in order to keep their family together.
I can feel their passion towards traditional hand-drawn art just by looking at their art strokes.” Dudu, an impeccably dressed man in his early thirties, professed to be a coffee enthusiast and this snippet of information that he freely divulged is backed by his artwork. His doodling, the fastest which usually takes him a few minutes to complete, is always interspersed with coffee in one way or another - be it using coffee as his tool or incorporating coffee into his characters’
“Where are you Going, Where have you Been” by Joyce Carol Oates is a short story that tells of the horrors that are possible when a child is rebellious and secretive. The story’s action begins when the main character, Connie, secretly visits a restaurant when she said she was in the movies, here she sees a man and he waves at her. Later, the same man shows up to her house when her family isn’t home and is trying to convince her to ‘go for a ride’ with him, and the reader learns his name is Arnold Friend. Connie talks to him for a bit, and eventually is manipulated into going with him, and it is assumed that Arnold kills her. Arnold Friend is a creepy, demanding older man, and his true personality is highlighted by the way the author writes
The book, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part- Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie, shows many examples of intolerance of another race. These intolerances of another race lead to the result of the word racism. Unlike all the other Indians on the reservation, Junior decided to be brave and go to an all-white school. Once Junior got to school,
When he makes his pieces he draws things he 's really interested in. He likes to draw about love, loss, fear and foreboding, community, tranquility, and loneliness. Tim says that clay is more important than the immediate political or social issues of the day is the greater struggle of humans to find a way to fit back in to the natural pattern of life on earth. By working with black and white, he invokes a world where humans are counterparts of the creatures he creates. Above all, he draws to illustrate the wonder and mystery of living in the world we all share.
True Diary Of A Part Time Indian There are many example of what it mean to be human. It is natural to feel the desire to fit in with a group that is considered to be “normal”, but it can also be very damaging when people are always saying that you 're not. As people grow up they form their own opinions based on their experience. Junior is a Native American teenage who lives on an Indian reservation with him mother, father and sister.
“In the middle of a crazy drunk life, you have to hang on the good and sober moments tightly.” (The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie page 216) This is a quote from the book that shows how Junior learns how to appreciate the good moments in life. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie the character Junior faces problems caused by drinking. The book starts off with his family living on the Indian reservation suffering from poverty and death.
The boy’s father does not like the teacher, and he basically does not want his son to join any activity in the school so he strongly refused the teacher’s advice. Later that night, Josh’s father asked his mother what she bought from town. She told Josh’s father that she bought Josh some crayons and Josh’s father got
Enrolling in a new school provided him with opportunity that he may not have otherwise had. It wasn’t blocked from him his whole life: it was a choice. Arnold was given the option between a murky future and the potential of a new start, but he didn’t take this new start over his culture. He still attended powwows and dances because switching schools did not take away his past. Finding his own path certainly was not easy, but it was possible.
In his book the Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Sherman Alexie portrays a teenage boy, Arnold Spirit (junior) living in white man’s world, and he must struggle to overcome racism and stereotypes if he must achieve his dreams. In the book, Junior faces a myriad of misfortunes at his former school in ‘the rez’ (reservation), which occurs as he struggles to escape from racial and stereotypical expectations about Indians. For Junior he must weigh between accepting what is expected of him as an Indian or fight against those forces and proof his peers and teachers wrong. Therefore, from the time Junior is in school at reservation up to the time he decides to attend a neighboring school in Rearden, we see a teenager who is facing tough consequences for attempting to go against the racial stereotypes.
John Locke, a famous philosopher, once said,“I have always thought the actions of men are the best interpreters of their thoughts.” People are not always who they seem, and their true self is revealed through their actions. In Joyce Carol Oates’s suspenseful short story, ”Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” antagonist, Arnold Friend, uses faustian tactics such as flattery, fear, and lies to manipulate and overpower the protagonist, Connie. Equivalent to the Devil, Arnold Friend uses flattery to deceive Connie. Throughout the story it is evident that Connie is suffering from a deficient amount of attention from home.
He strived to get good grades, and even went as far as bringing his mother flowers, knowing full well it would make this process a living hell for them. Connor completely disregards authority and disrespects the people in charge of his life, even though he understands that this could ultimately be his
Overcoming a challenge, not giving up, and not being afraid of change are a few themes demonstrated in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Perhaps the most prominent theme derived from the novel is defying the odds, or in other words rising above the expectations of others. Junior Spirit exemplifies this theme throughout the entirety of the book. As Junior is an Indian, he almost expects that he will never leave the reservation, become an alcoholic, and live in poverty like the other Indians on the reservation—only if he sits around and does not endeavor to change his fate. When Junior shares the backstory of his parents, he says that his mother and father came from “poor people who came from poor people who came from poor people, all the way back to the very first poor people” (11).