“I would always love Rowdy. And I would always miss him, too. Just as I would always love and miss my grandmother, and my big sister, and Eugene.” When facing hardships it is important to stay resilient and not let them ruin your connection with others. In the book The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian the main character Arnold Spirit becomes more resilient as the novel progresses as he deals with being poor, racism from his predominantly white school, and dealing with the deaths of many important figures in his life.
Being poor is the first of many hardships that Arnold must overcome during high school. While he was out with friends, when it comes time to pay Arnold realises that he cannot afford to pay his and his girlfriend’s tab,
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“I ordered orange juice, and coffee, and a side order of toast and hot chocolate and French fries, too, even though I knew I wouldn’t be able to pay for any of it” (Alexie 125). Arnold soon realises the situation he is put in and borrows money from a friend. Later, this comes up as his girlfriend is told he couldn’t pay their tab, leaving Arnold to explain his situation “Are you poor? Yes, I’m poor” (Alexie 127). To Arnold’s surprise, instead of disregarding him, Penelope tells him that his friends will always be there for him. Showing Arnold that with friends you can get pass any issue. Racism was a problem Arnold has always had to deal with, but when he moves to a predominantly white school, he sees how many people despise the fact that he is Native American.
After arriving for the first time he starts to believe he does not belong at the school because of his race “Reardan was the opposite of the rez. It was the opposite of my family. It was the opposite of me. I didn’t deserve to be there.” With no other Native Americans to comfort him he starts to doubt himself further. Soon after, he finds friends who do not care about his race and finds confidence in himself, he did not have before “If you let people into your life a little bit, they can be pretty damn amazing” (Alexie 129). After finding new friends and coming out of his shell, Arnold realises that while some people may look down on him because of his race, other can find it makes him special. Soon after Arnold finds his true friends all care about him as a person, not what race he …show more content…
is. Death was always an issue in Arnold’s life, while mainly stemming from alcoholism, many of whom Arnold looked up to and cared for soon died before he could properly say goodbye.
The death of his grandmother was an eye opening experience as he learned how she was such a tolerant person. “My grandmother’s last act on earth was a call for forgiveness, love, and tolerance” (Alexie 157). After realising that his grandmother’s redeeming quality was a trait he had to learn, Arnold grew as a person and became stronger than before. His sister’s death came soon after making the experience seem out of body for Arnold “We’re here, he said. My sister is dead, I said Yes. I was hoping I dreamed that, I said. Me, too.” (Alexie 207). His conversations with his parents soon made him realised that they loved him which he had earlier learned to not believe. This caused the connection between him and his parents greater and tightened their family bond. Arnold, however, remained unbroken and continued to live his life after these
incidents. In his journey, Arnold Spirit becomes more resilient as his life progresses as he deals with being poorer than his peers, racism from his small town school, and dealing with the deaths of his favorite family members. With all of his new experiences, Arnold becomes a stronger person and makes stronger connections with the people around him as a result. Arnold realises that no matter the hardships life gives you, you cannot let that make you a shell of your former self.
To represent a way he overcomes obstacles in basketball is when Arnold says, “I don’t know what happened. But for once, and for the only time in my life, I jumped higher than Rowdy. I rose above him as he tried to dunk it. I TOOK THE BALL RIGHT OUT OF HIS HANDS!” (192) This represents overcoming obstacles because Arnold had to work hard to be more exceptional than Rowdy. He also had to overcome being the underdog on the basketball team and an underdog in the all white school. Arnold was able to overcome being the underdog in both situations. He even overcame being one of the underdogs on the reservation who would get bullied. At the very ending of the book Arnold gets his best friend back, even though Rowdy may be angry and want Arnold to go to school with him Rowdy lets it go.
Encountering struggles in life defines one’s character and speaks volumes about their strength, ambition, and flexibility. Through struggles, sacrifice, and tragedy, Junior in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie, adapts to survive difficult situations and faces his problems head-on. As he makes life changing decisions, adapts to an unfamiliar culture, and finds himself amongst misery and heartbreak, Junior demonstrates resilience to overcome adversity and struggles.
Can you imagine growing up on a reservation full of people with no hope? The character Arnold in the book The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie did. In the beginning of the book, Arnold was a hopeless Native American living on a hopeless reservation. In the middle of the book, Arnold leaves the reservation and finds out that his sister left too.
Picture yourself in a town where you are underprivileged and sometimes miss a meal. In the novel, “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,” Sherman Alexie wrote the book to show hardships that Native Americans face today. Alexie shows us hardships such as poverty, alcoholism and education. In the novel, Junior goes against the odds to go to an all white school to get a better education to have a better life
During the course of the story, Junior and Rowdy both tackle the theme of identity. This is especially clear when Junior abandons him and leaves the reservation school to attend a predominately white school in a nearby town. In Alexie’s novel, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Rowdy is an aggressive character, but he uses this trait in a positive manner as he is also fiercely caring. This synthesis of positive and negative traits reveal that one's flaws can be good, and they allow for the separation and reunification of Rowdy and Junior in the novel.
It is said by Jeb Bush that, “Our children can achieve great things when we set high expectations for them”. Well, Arnold (Junior) Spirit in the book The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, doesn’t have high expectations, if anything he is expected to fail, in life and in school. But Junior has ambition like none other, that is why he decides to break away from his reservation and attend the racist school Reardan. During his time in Reardan and on the Reservation, Junior rises above the life he was expected to live; he demonstrates ambition through perseverance and finds his identity, which proves humans ability to rise above expectations.
Alexie incorporates one point of view, different themes and settings, such as poverty, friendship, Spokane and Reardan within Arnold’s journey to illustrate the different hardships he must overcome to gain a higher education. The entire novel is written from the point of view of the main character Arnold. The reader would feel as though they are having a conversation with a close friend and is then better able to relate and sympathize with Arnold’s struggles and accomplishments. For example, Arnold begins telling the reader his story by stating, “I was born with water on the brain.” (Alexie, 1) Explaining his medical condition at the beginning of the novel allows the reader to easily understand why Arnold may react differently to certain social situations.
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie is a novel about Arnold Spirit (Junior), a boy from the Spokane Indian Reservation who decides to attend high school outside the reservation in order to have a better future. During that first year at Reardan High School, Arnold has to find his place at his all-white school, cope with his best friend Rowdy and most of his tribe disowning him, and endure the deaths of his grandmother, his father’s best friend, and his sister. Alexie touches upon issues of identity, otherness, alcoholism, death, and poverty in order to stay true to his characters and the cultures within the story. Through the identification of the role of the self, identity, and social behavior within the book, the reader can understand Arnold’s story to a greater depth.
In Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, the main character Arnold, also known as Junior, has many health issues, and notably stands out in the crowd. It does not help that he is a poor Indian boy that lives on a reservation, and that he decides to go to an all-white high school. Many of his experiences at school, and on the Reservation, impact his identity. Experience is the most influential factor in shaping a person’s identity because it helps gain confidence, it teaches new things, and it changes one’s outlook on the world.
What drives people to work hard? Where does determination come from? What causes us to want to make something of our lives? These questions are answered through two prominent themes that run through this book. In reading Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian, the character of Junior helps explore these questions through the power of expectations and hope. These themes give people drive, determination, and passion for their lives. When one or both of these important elements are taken away, that determination, passion, and drive goes with it.
With the obstacles that happen to Junior, it creates an emotional and traumatic impact on Junior as well as getting the readers hooked to turn the page and keep reading. To begin, in “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” Sherman Alexie describes a moment in Junior's life before he went to the white school. From comparing the death rates and even mentioning the deaths, Alexie shows an emotional impact on Junior from the deaths he has to go through. Alexie writes about how Junior being an Indian has impacted his life.
Often at time’s society forces us to make choices we would rather not make, mainly because one is different or a different color. The Absolutely True Diary Of A Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, is about how a teenage Indian who lives on Spokane reserve moves to a white school and gets shamed for being Indian, for making this decision his tribe has disowned him for leaving the rez and moving to the city. The main ideas are the rez, school, and family/friends. Jr’s dad is a drunk, but he loves his son. He has never missed a basketball game,Dad is an alcoholic who will disappear for days to drink. Rowdy is the toughest kid on the rez and all the other kids are afraid of him, but he always protects Junior from bullies. In return Junior helps
...with the people in his town is filled with belittlement and inequality. Dave as a person was a selfish individual with a narrow mind goal to get a gun, for approval of others to look at him differently. Dave thought that having a gun will make him a man and will change the racial barrier in his home town. In reality Dave leads to killing the mule, to becoming the laughing stalk of the town, and to have to run away to start a new life in another town. Dave’s story of tragedy, shows that it is of appalling importance for a person to have a self-identity. So that in the end it is possible to avert any serious problems from occurring later on in life, therefore to prevent having a life like Dave. Though this short story did show that in the south there are implications of racial differences. The story also shows how important it is for a person to have a self-identity.
Imagine walking 22 miles to school every single day. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is a book by Sherman Alexie following the life of Arnold, also known as Junior, and his struggles as a poor Native American boy going to a wealthy white school. Being poor throws challenges at Arnold in and outside of school, and he must hold onto hope, new friends, and perseverance to escape the cycle of poverty.
Arnold states, “And I kept trying to find the little pieces of joy in my life. That’s the only way I managed to make it through all of that death and change. I made a list of the people who had given me the most joy in my life” (176). This shows that out of all this grieving, the only way to cope is to find the small joys about life. Once Arnold gave up he started to find