Summary Of Trauma Presented In Indian Horse By Richard Wagamese

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Trauma Presented in Indian Horse Richard Wagamese, author of Indian Horse published by Douglas & McIntyre in 2013, expresses the cultural and generational trauma through his character Saul Indian Horse and how trauma can be expressed throughout one’s life after an event. Saul is confronted with the merciless oppression of society throughout his life, extensively during his childhood while he was unequivocally impacted by the cultural genocide of Indigenous peoples. His deeply rooted trauma is a direct result of his experiences of loss, abandonment, isolation, and physical and mental abuse inflicted onto his cultural society. Throughout his life, Saul was forced to experience the bereavement of loss and face the change that follows it. As a young boy, he witnessed the tragic …show more content…

Virgil, Saul’s friend, teammate, and adoptive brother, does not describe the entirety of the altercation with Saul, but he was able to express the amount of anger and shame he was feeling simply by stating, “They pissed on us, Saul.” (Chapter 31, page 135). As Saul matures, he describes the same feelings during his own situations of aggression, which he learned from Virgil and is mirroring because of the traumatic incident. Finally, we can attribute a large portion of his trauma to the mental abuse he endured. Saul was targeted, purposefully attacked and excluded from hockey, he was called names such as “rampaging redskin”, and directly abused because he is Indian. The trauma of being called names based on stereotypes like “rampaging redskin” stuck with Saul, which he expressed when he decided to act the way everyone was saying/expecting him to. It got to his head, and so to make it stop hurting he gave into it as a way to cope with it and silence it. “Hey, I’m just giving them what they want,” Saul stated, “The crowd, the team. Don’t you read the

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