This play really did open my eyes
and made me more curious to more of these Native stories. What “Dead White
Writer on the Floor” really taught be about Native Peoples of Canada is how Canadians
were taught to hold prejudices against Indigenous people and how Canadians were
influenced to treat Natives unfairly. I believe that the Natives in Canada
sometimes try to change their lives in order to fit in with other Canadians.
They begin to lose their culture and identity. In the play, when the characters
realize that changing doesn’t do much for you when it comes to associating a
Native in the eyes of a Canadian, Bill says that “Nothing has changed, we
exchanged one pair of moccasins for another. Things didn’t get better”. In the
end of the play the characters realized that this whole time they have been
blaming the White writer, or the “Canadian” in this case, of all their
problems, when no one is to blame for their change, but themselves. They are
the ones who put matters into their own hands and decided to try and loose all
their Native culture and change who they are because they wanted to feel like
they fit in. Despite the way Native Americans are portrayed in books and their
stereotypes in current Canadian society, people often forget that Native
Peoples have hopes and aspirations beyond what is expected from them.
Sunday, 1 June 2014
Indigenous culture in the play!
The Indigenous culture revealed in
this play explores the different stereotypes people see in Native Americans. Most
of the stereotypes are one sided representations of Indigenous culture. Some of
people’s assumptions of Native people include them being alcoholics. Drew Hayden
Taylor presents one of his characters as having an alcohol problem to show a
Canadian’s stereotypical view on Indigenous people. I also believe that all the
characters respected Old Lodge Skins very much, which is truly something Native’s
should be proud to be represented by. Respect for the elders is a very big part
of Indigenous culture that has been proven very clearly throughout this play. In
this culture, people have a very strong tie to relationships, nature, and the
love between family members. Once the community around them changed, Indigenous
people felt forced to change as well in order to “fit in”. This is because the
diversity around them is not very accepting to those who are different than the
usual. Moral of the play is to stay loyal to your culture and never be ashamed
or feel forced to change for anybody.
Themes of identity, relationships, challenges, and sovereignty in the play!
The four themes connected to the grade eleven Native English
I am currently taking are the themes of identity, relationships, challenges,
and sovereignty. I believe that the
entire play was mainly on the theme of identity and challenges. The six characters
struggle to accept the people they have been their whole lives, and to accept
their identity. Throughout the book these characters try to find a way to
change their identity for they are embarrassed and hated because of it. They discovery
challenges, when indeed they do change in act 2, which help them realize they
should not change their identity or who they are. As the six characters are
trapped in the room together a lot of character relationships developed. Through
talking with one another, we, as readers, are able to find out more and more
about each character. Every single one of them treated each other, depending on
their moods, either with anger, fear, or love. Sovereignty in this play was
shown when Old Lodge Skins used the example that by blockading Tim Hortons, it
shows a righteous political act that demonstrates their sovereignty against a
symbol of Canadian imperialism. To the rest of the characters being Indigenous
was not more important than fitting in, and Old Lodge Skins helps them realize
that changing their identity is not the way to go.
What i didn't like about the play!
Although the play was a very funny and interesting piece of
literature, there is something I did not like as much. What I didn’t really
like about this book is how in act 2 all the characters change all their names
and left it up to the readers to sort of guess which ones which. Some
characters were easier to point out than others such as, Pocahontas turns into
Sally. It was obvious because she is the only female mentioned in the book. Or
when Old Lodge Skins turns into John, it was obvious because John, in act 2,
was saying how he waited his whole life to be young again. Therefore meaning
that he was always the eldest, which lead to me guessing that John must have
been Old Lodge Skins in act 1. I also think that there could have been a better
ending to the play because in the closing scene it becomes quite clear that
another change is going to happen. The lights go out and with the dead white
writer, maybe still alive, everything could be changed again. But the writing
failed to leave the readers with much curiosity as to what new characters will
become of them this time. I believe it is
because when the characters changed the first time it wasn’t much of an
exciting moment in the book.
What i liked about the play!
I really enjoyed reading this play and would recommend this
book to others. What I really liked in particular about this play is the style
of the writing and the humorous tone. Drew Hayden Taylor writes in such a funny
way and makes fun about indigenous people by putting stereotyped individuals of
different backgrounds together to let them discover that they are all different
characters. I liked the way every character had completely different: noble,
innocent, ignorant, fearless, wise and gay. None of these characters know how
the writer had died. They try to find out if one of the six did kill him. The
different characters in the book make it really amusing. Sometimes it seems to
be that they didn’t fit together and they wanted to kill each other. Then other
times they fight together to find the murder of the white writer. While reading
the play in act 1, there are some monologues each character presents. The one
that impressed me the most was Pocahontas’. Usually she is the small Indian
girl, that doesn’t like violence or fighting. But in this scene she jumps out
of her daily life role and gets really angry. I was laughing really hard when I
first read it.
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