Fleur is unpopular on the reservation, and some gather to throw her out. In the summer of 1920, she leaves on her own accord for the town of Argus. Noticing a steeple, she walks straight to the church and asks the priest for work. He sends her to a butcher shop where Fleur works with the owner's wife Fritzie, hauling packages of meat to a locker. Fleur gives the men a new topic of conversation, particularly when she begins playing cards with them.…
“The Red Convertible” by Louise Erdrich is a story of two brothers who are native Indians that live in a reservation. Lyman and Henry are very close. They purchase a red convertible together, which they both cherish. The main character in the story is Lyman Lamartine, narrator and protagonist. Lyman is the lucky younger brother who is great at making money. Lyman Lamartine proved to be a character, which readers can look up to. At the age of sixteen Lyman had already owned his own restaurant. “After I’d owned the Joliet for…
The short story “The Red Convertible” is told by Lyman Lamartine, one of the two main characters in this short story and one of the many characters that are involved in the novels of “Love Medicine” by Louise Erdrich. That is why the story is symbolic because it is told from the point of view of a true Indian living in the North Dakota reservation. The story is set on a time period of war which reinforces the meaning of the story and the feeling of sorrow that Erdrich was trying to enforce on its readers.…
In Louise Erdrich’s “The Red Convertible” Lyman Lamartine tells his story about his brother Henry, and the red convertible, showing them joy but also heartache. Henry and Lyman are Native American and live in Chippewa. Lyman narrates the story and explains how he and his brother spot the red convertible one day walking down Portage, and are fortuitous enough to have money to purchase it. The brother’s then start out on a summer adventure, driving place to place eventually leading them to Alaska after picking up a hitchhiker. After coming home from their trip Henry is drafted by the army, then becomes a Marine. Lyman writes Henry however Henry does not write as often to Lyman. Henry returns home after the war and his family quickly realizes…
The Lais of Marie de France offers an inquisitive perspective on the nature of love and the sacrifices one must make in relationships and marriage. While reading, I encountered many examples of a man and woman in love who must suffer for one another. This collection of narratives contains characters in relationships in which each partner suffers equally for one another and characters in which one partner sacrifices more than the other.…
Louise Erdrich was a concessioner at the Gilles Theater in Wahpeton, North Dakota at the age of fourteen. At her workplace, she could watch the movie after the completion of her assigned work. She had watched every movie again and again; nothing was good to her except Costa- Gavra’s Z, a French film in 1969 that changed her life, regarded as the best movie in her life. She had changed herself in many ways: She realized that her parents were right about her career, she practiced to be success and engaged in work. She also knew life is more than the stag leap, or the flying T. The phrases “The forces of greed and hatred cannot tolerate us” was stuck in her mind after the third viewing of the movie.…
Little boys, young men, and even adult men all at one point or another develop and share some type of bond with their brother. Whether it is a tree house, sports, movies, music, or perhaps an event or particular incident, brothers always seem to have some common thing they can share and identify with, which brings them closer and acts as the foundation for their relationship. For Lyman and Henry, the narrator and his brother in Louise Erdrich’s short story “The Red Convertible”, it was a red Oldsmobile convertible that they shared, and it was that car that brought them closer together. They purchased the car together in Winnipeg, drove all over the country one summer together, and shared a lot of time and memories together…
Family is an essential part to the development of every human life. They are there for guidance, support, and most importantly love. The bond between brothers is a bond that cannot be forged. There are many types of relationships: Husband and wife; Father and son; Mother and daughter; but the bond between brothers is one like no other. In Louise Erdrich’s short story “The Red Convertible,” Lyman and Henry’s relationship will give readers the understanding that time, war, and death will change people, but the bonds of brotherhood cannot be broken.…
Fleur Pillager, is the focal character in “Tracks” by Louise Erdrich, is a strong and mysterious woman. Through most of the book, she carried herself with confidence. The other characters around her reacted to her with either fear, respect or both. She is feared as a witch. Fleur had a significant effect on who ever she encountered. Just like any other person she had trouble with her ethnicity; she didn’t know who she was or where she came from. Fleur was like “an unknown mixture of ingredients” (Tracks pg 39). She is struggling to maintain her richness in tradition and culture.…
1. Identify and explain an emotion that Bradstreet expresses in her poem that any mother might have.…
Louise Erdrich was born on July 6, 1954 as the eldest daughter of seven children of a Chippewa Indian mother and a German-American father in Little Falls, Minnesota but she grew in Wahpeton, North Dakota. Louis Erdrich’s cultural identity was that she was of the Chippewa Indian tribe of the Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota from her mother side. At an early age Louise was encouraged by her parents to write stories and that her father would paid her a nickel a story and her mother made covers for her first books and Louise continued her writing by keeping a journal when she was in high school. Louise Erdrich is known for her first novel Love Medicine which won her the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1984, The Plague of Doves, which was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and the Round House which won the National Book Award for Fiction. “Louise Erdrich”, “Poetry Foundation”, “OEDB”…
Mary Warren is a young servant girl whose ethics are challenged when she becomes afflicted with terror and intimidation.…
Unlike Nanapush and Fleur, Louise Erdrich uses the character of Pauline to demonstrate the rejection of Ojibwa religion and culture. Throughout the novel, Pauline is known as a liar and troublemaker who tries her best and hardest to single handedly destroy Ojibwa life, religion, and culture. For example, in the novel, Pauline had “bothered [her] father into sending [her] south, to the white town. [She] had decided to learn the lace-making trade from the nuns” (Erdrich, 14). Pauline is asking her dad to send her south away from the other Native Americans, and more importantly, away from the Ojibwa religion. In this part of the novel, Erdrich best conveys Pauline’s rejection of Ojibwa religion by showing how the efforts she would go through in order to separate herself from the Ojibwa way of life. Pauline has rejected this lifestyle to such great amounts that she is willing to move…
Women in 1901 were different to women today in the aspect of their clothing, their legal rights and homelife. In my repost i will comapre the two ages.…
I have a pretty interesting history that I didn’t know until now. My great grandmother Regina Magier and my great grandfather Alter (Alex) Magier came to America in 1947 after World War II. It must have been hard to regroup after all they went through during the war. Regina and Alter had a tough childhood in Poland being part of the Holocaust. Regina grew up in Warsaw with her parents and her sister. It had been tough growing up with war all around and never truly being safe. She didn’t have an education growing up and never really learned how to read. It must have been hard growing up the way she did. Regina and Alter spoke Hebrew their whole life before coming to America. It must have been very hard to learn English for the first time. That's what my great grandparents' lives were like back home.…