Analysis Of The Scalpel And The Silver Bear

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The Scalpel and the Silver Bear: Two Worlds Collide The Navajo creation story explains that medicine was brought to the people by an ancient owl. This owl sent down a magic bundle containing the powers of healing to the new world. For thousands of years Navajo people have used this knowledge to heal and live in harmony with each other. As a product of two worlds, Dr. Lori Alvord was one of the first people to combine modern medicine with Navajo beliefs by overcoming cultural differences. The Scalpel and the Silver Bear follows Lori Alvord on her journey from humble beginnings on the Navajo Reservation to a surgeon in the operating room. She was raised in a small community in the Navajo Nation which spans territory the …show more content…

The Scalpel and the Silver Bear is similar to Richard Rodriguez’s Hunger of Memory in the sense that it was written with a purpose in mind. Each memory she shared was selected for a very specific reasons. She shares certain medical cases to convince the reader of the benefits of combining western medicine with Navajo healing; just as Rodriquez tried to persuade the reader against affirmative action. Like Joyce in Portrait of an Artist, at the conclusion of each episode she has an important epiphany. One of her most important epiphanies comes when she realizes that modern medicine and traditional healing can benefit from each other. Her success story is very similar to Jade Snow’s in Fifth Chinese Daughter as she often faces racial discrimination in the work place. Alvord would encounter white doctors who doubt her ability and assume her “being a surgeon [was] attributed to quota filling, not the result of hard work,” based solely on the fact that she was Native American …show more content…

Alvord explains every Navajo was strongly discouraged from drawing attention to him or herself and was taught very early on to be modest and not to boast. This becomes very problematic for her in classes where she is expected to participate and be competitive. In Navajo culture it is even considered rude to look someone in the eyes. So, Alvord would sit in class, staring down at her desk, trying to make herself invisible. Many of her teachers took her avoidance and lack of participation as signs of

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