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Coyote Kills John Wayne

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Coyote Kills John Wayne ... Adds Stephanie: the fact that 'some of the white' ... he's forgetting that he's just somebody else's dream, somebody else's fiction. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coyote Kills John Wayne


1
Coyote Kills John Wayne
  • James Clifton gives a pretty good rundown of what
    sorts of ideas Hollywood has transmitted about
    cowboys, Indians, and Manifest Destiny (as
    Stephanie Dowdle puts it in Hollywood Westerns,
    the Native Americans were generally the bad guys
    who lost to the brave white heroes of the
    West)and of how GGRW turns those ideas on their
    ear.

2
John Wayne Lives
  • Adds Stephanie the fact that some of the
    white people in the story still watched and
    enjoyed stories of their ancestors conquering
    natives shows that many of the same attitudes
    regarding manifest destiny still exist.

3
Truth is stranger?
  • But what GGRW also reminds us, Stephanie
    concludes, is that history books are written by
    the victor.
  •  

4
Truth is stranger?
  • But what GGRW also reminds us, Stephanie
    concludes, is that history books are written by
    the victor.
  •  
  • Even more than that, implies Olivia Smith, it
    implies that the traditional distinction between
    history and fiction iswell, fiction
  •  
  • No, no, says Coyote. Its the truth.
  • There are no truths, Coyote, I says. Only
    stories. (432)
  •  

5
Truth is stranger?
  • But what GGRW also reminds us, Stephanie
    concludes, is that history books are written by
    the victor.
  •  
  • Even more than that, implies Olivia Smith, it
    implies that the traditional distinction between
    history and fiction iswell, fiction
  •  
  • No, no, says Coyote. Its the truth.
  • There are no truths, Coyote, I says. Only
    stories. (432)
  •  
  • And whats comical about GOD, we remember, is
    that while he thinks got a corner on original
    Truth, hes forgetting that hes just somebody
    elses dream, somebody elses fiction.

6
Truth is stranger?
  • Reese Layton elaborates
  • In Green Grass, Running Water history is
    confusing even to the characters. Everyone is
    trying to find out where they came from, they all
    have different reasons for seeking out their
    origins, and all of their stories seem to lead
    back to when the earth was nothing but water
    before the Dog God came along and messed
    everything up with his crazy white-man ideas of
    how things should be.

7
Dances with Coyoteser, Wolves
  • Andy Zask points out that one of the crazy
    white-man ideas that King lampoons is the
    tendency for white writers and filmmakers to
    idealize Indians. This was true even before
    Cooper wrote about Hawkeye, the white man who
    went savage and lived with the last of the
    Mohicans. Early on, Europeans were fascinated by
    John Smiths accounts of the natives and the
    story of Pocahontas, and Enlightenment
    philosophers used their conceptions of Indian
    life as a basis for their concept of a natural
    state.  In these situations and the stories of
    Hawkeye, Indians were romanticized and even to
    some degree envied, but they were never really
    understood. 

8
Dances with Coyoteser, Wolves
  • These writers, artists and philosophers upheld a
    version of Indian thatnever really existed. 
    They revered Indians as wild people or
    savages. Even as they placed Indian culture on a
    pedestal, they never acknowledged Indians as
    being civilized. This is what comes through in
    the Western stories in GGRW. The Indian chief is
    shown as proud, noble and honorable. He isnt
    out-and-out evil. Hes just a simple frontier
    Indian who wants to help his people but happens
    to be standing in the way of Progress. The
    (white) audience is invited to sympathize with
    the Indians plight, but not so much that they
    cant cheer on John Wayne.

9
Dances with Coyoteser, Wolves
  • I think King wants to show the absurdity of this
    sort of romanticism, Andy argues. Since the
    beginning of European colonialism, one segment of
    white society has admired and respected Indians
    from afar, while other segments, settlers, armies
    and governments, have committed atrocity after
    atrocity. Hawkeye, Robinson Crusoe, Ishmael and
    The Lone Ranger all represent white men who left
    white society and became wild to some degree
    something both Ken and Zachary also pointed out
    in last weeks discussion forum.  In the cases
    of Hawkeye and The Lone Ranger, and possibly
    Robinson Crusoe, their creators probably thought
    their characters and stories would be a good way
    to show sympathy to Indians. Again, their way of
    exalting Indian culture relied on the assumption
    that Indians were more wild than white people.
    But Indians needed more than this patronizing
    brand of sympathy and understanding. Thats why
    in the novel the only way the four Old Indians
    can fix the western is by having the Indians
    win and kill John Wayne. Rather than explain and
    complain about the negative history between the
    peoples, King ridicules it, and in doing so
    allows the reader to arrive at his or her own
    conclusions about the history and Hollywoods
    interpretation of it.

10
And if an Indian dances with John Wayne?
  • But meanwhile, says Kathryn Winbigler, a
    character like Lionel is left stranded in the
    middle Lionelcannot seem to be accepted (at
    least by Aunt Norma) within his Native culture
    because of the heavy influence that American
    culture has had on his life. Even though Lionel
    idealized John Wayne, the cowboy jacket didnt
    fit, says Olivia. Both groups that he
    identifies with shun him and because of that he
    cannot find a place where he feels that he
    belongs.
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