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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Ruth Benedict’s Ethnography of Pueblo Culture, Patterns of Culture, and

Response Piece Silko & benedickAs noted in the response by Janet Tallman, there are three main themes concerning ruth Benedicts ethnography of Pueblo culture, Patterns of Culture, and Leslie Marmon Silkos novel Ceremony. Both occurrence the importance of matrilineage, harmony and balance versus change, and ceremonies to the Pueblo Indians. It is important to note that Silko gives the lecturer a first-hand perspective of this feelingstyle (she was raised in the Laguna Pueblo Reservation), while Benedicts book is written from a third-person point of view. Because of this, it was fairly balmy to see how much of the actual culture was overlooked or misinterpreted in Benedicts work. While the above-mentioned themes about Pueblo Indians were indeed mentioned in her book, Ceremony allows the reader comes away with a better understanding of why they lived as they lived, and how their lifestyle choices impacted every decision they made. As in my first assignment, my interpretation of t he books was that Silkos was from a much more ad hominem perspective a luxury provided because her book is to be enjoyed as a fictional novel instead of an academic text. Set against the backdrop of post-WWII reservation life, the struggles of the Laguna Pueblo culture to maintain its identity while adjusting to the realities of modern day life are even more pronounced in Ceremony. Silko uses a wide range of characters in order to give a parting to as many re pass onatives of her tribe as possible. The main character, Tayo, is the person with whom the reader is more than likely to relate. The story opens with him reliving dissimilar phases of his life in flashbacks, and through them, the reader shares his inability to discern reality from delusion, past from present and right from wrong. His days are clouded by his post-war sickness, guilt for macrocosm the one to survive while his cousin Rocky is slain, and his inability to conduct neither with life on the reservation or in t he orthogonal world. He is one of several representations of the beginnings of the Laguna Pueblo youth interacting with modern American culture.Tayos aunt (Auntie) is the personification of the Pueblo cultures staunch competition to change. She is bound to her life and the people around her more so because of the various disgraces brought upon her family by her nephew Tayo being a half-breed, her brother Josiahs turn in af... ...of looking within themselves for the causes of their misery, they chose to blame the white man for their misfortunes. At the aforementioned(prenominal) time, they were causing pain and suffering unto themselves by punishing those who were deemed too polar (Emo trying to kill Tayo and settling on Harley) and shunning any changes to life as they k unexampled it. By the end of the novel, Tayo represents the potentially new world for Pueblo culture. As Betonie said, elements in the world began to shift and it became necessary to create new rituals in order to keep the ceremonies strong. This represents a very modern view on Pueblo life (Silkos) of the price tribe people must pay in order to survive in this world. As shown by Tayos last change, Silko sees it as necessary to maintain the essential parts of Pueblo culture in order to maintain the web that connects all its people together solely one must also learn to adapt and accept the new world created around him or her in order to survive. Dont let them stop you, Betonie said in page 152, Dont let them finish off with this world. Stagnation is just as minus as overwhelming change. Leslie Marmon Silko - CeremonyRuth Benedict - Patterns of Culture

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