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    N. Scott Momaday Analysis

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    Navarre Scott Momaday who known as N. Scott Momaday is a Native American author who wrote “The way to Rainy Mountain in 1969. In the essay he tried to get back in his heritage by undertaking a journey to Rainy Mountain in Oklahoma where he visited his late grandmother’s grave. In this essay he also tries to tell the story of his departed grandmother Aho‚ who belonged to the last culture to spread in North America. No wonder she had memories of hardship while war was her ancestor’s sacred business

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    1934‚ N. Scott Momaday was born to mother‚ Mayme Scott who was a teacher and a writer‚ and to father Alfred Morris Mammedaty who was a teacher and an artist. Momaday’s father later reduced the family’s surname to the present day spelling of Momaday. N. Scott Momaday was specified as seven-eighths Native after birth‚ and a tarrying one-eighth of pioneer lineage. In Native American tradition‚ presenting a name for a person is significant as in determining the person’s life course. Momaday was given

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    “The Way to Rainy Mountain” by N. Scott Momaday “The Way to Rainy Mountain” is a short story by N. Scott Momaday. In this short work‚ Momaday describes the loss of someone special to him‚ his grandmother‚ and the things and places that remind him of her. He spends a lot of time describing the terrain of what his people have named “Rainy Mountain”. His people are the Kiowa‚ an old Native American tribe that lived on the plains of Oklahoma. The story‚ in the literal sense‚ is about the main

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    A Writers Style The Pulitzer Prize winning writer N. Scott Momaday has become known as a very distinctive writer who depicts the stories of the Native American life in almost poetic ways. He does an excellent job of transporting the reader from the black and white pages of a book‚ to a world where every detail is pointed out and every emotion felt when reading one of Momaday’s books or other writings. This style of writing that Momaday uses is very evident in his work "The Way to Rainy Mountain

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    Momaday

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    Momaday was born February 27‚ 1934 in Lawton‚ Oklahoma. He was born in the Kiowa and Comanche Indian Hospital‚ and was then registered with having seven-eighths Indian blood. N. Scott Momaday was born of having a mix of English‚ Irish‚ French‚ and Cherokee blood while‚ his father‚ Alfred Morris Momaday was a full blood Kiowa. His mother was a writer and his father‚ a painter. In 1935‚ when N. Scott Momaday was one year old‚ his family moved to Arizona where both his father and mother became

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    little knowledge about the past’s people‚ their passions‚ wisdom and lifestyle. Particularly‚ authors‚ Momaday‚ Fixico and Wallace‚ transport us into a different world through their stories and they explain their peculiar take on the value of these stories. In Momaday’s “The Man Made of Words”‚ he makes a striking statement about oral tradition and its importance. Oral tradition‚ according to Momaday‚ is the “…myths‚ legends‚ tales‚ and lore of people…preserved

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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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    Momaday Passage Analysis N.S. Momaday‚ in his descriptive passage‚ paints a stark image of his people’s treasured land‚ the Rainy Mountains. As the piece progresses‚ he stresses the importance of a desolate setting in order to spur Creation‚ highlighting the significance of the Kiowas‚ and anticipating recognition and understanding from others. Through the use of contrasting images and shifts in perspective‚ Momaday targets and invites the fixed-minded to experience his homeland’s sacred qualities

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    evident in “My Two Lives” by Jhumpa Lahiri‚ “The Way to Rainy Mountain” by N. Scott Momaday‚ and the excerpt from The Lost City by Alan Ehrenhalt. In “My Two Lives”‚ there is a case of identity confusion. Lahiri is heavily influenced at home to be Indian‚ yet expected to act American at school and in the public eye. According to Lahiri’s parents‚ she was not American and she would never be‚ regardless of

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    The Dred Scott Decision: Opinion and Evidence Kay African American History Before 1877 Professor LaTasha Gatling 10 October 2014 In Revisiting Dred Scott: Prudence‚ Providence‚ and the Limits of Constitutional Statesmanship‚ Justin Buckley Dyer argues “According to the opinion written by Chief Justice Roger Taney‚ African slaves and their descendants were not‚ and could never become‚ citizens of the United States‚”1 rejecting that President Abraham Lincoln meant any less‚ when

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