Superman and Me

620 Words2 Pages

In his essay “Superman and Me”, Sherman Alexie details how he rose above the limits placed upon him because of his ethnicity. Alexie begins the essay by opening up to his audience and recounting how he taught himself to read by using a Superman comic book. Alexie’s family was living paycheck to paycheck, so he began reading anything and everything that he could get his hands on. The purpose of Alexie’s “Superman and Me” is to inform the audience of how one does not need to be affluent to learn. With pathos, repetition, and elaborate metaphors, Sherman Alexie evokes a change of mind from his audience.
Alexie begins the essay by telling the audience some background information about himself and his family. He tells of how they lived on an Indian Reservation and survived on “a combination of irregular paychecks, hope, fear and government surplus food.” (Page 1, para. 1) Right from the start, Alexie grabs the emotions of his audience. Alexie then goes on to talk of his father and how because of his love for his father, he developed a love for reading. “My father loved books, and since I loved my father with an aching devotion, I decided to love books as well.” (Page 1, para. 2) He talks of how he taught himself to read and that because of the books he began to thirst for more knowledge. Alexie says that once he learned to read, he began to advance quickly in his schooling. However, because of his thirst for knowledge, he got into much trouble. “A smart Indian was a dangerous person, widely feared and ridiculed by Indians and non-Indians alike.” (Page 2, para. 6) This statement is one of the most powerful statements in the entire essay. The reason for this being that Alexie knows that trouble will come but he was not going to let it ...

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... to save our lives.” (Page 3, para. 7 & 8) Not only is this a reference to a metaphor, but it itself is a metaphor. When Alexie says “save my life… save our lives,” he is not speaking in a literal sense. Rather, he is speaking metaphorically because he is trying to save himself and his fellow Indians from falling into the cliché of a stupid Indian. Alexie could have phrased the statements anyway that he wanted, but by wording them in this way, he helps to reinforce the meaning of the title and evoke strong emotions from the hearts and minds of his readers.
Sherman Alexie’s “Superman and Me” is a rather intriguing and emotion packed essay of a young Indian boy’s remarkable quest for knowledge.

Works Cited

Alexie, Sherman. "Superman and Me." Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles Times, 19 Apr. 1998. Web. 14 May 2014. http://articles.latimes.com/1998/apr/19/books/bk-42979

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