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A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians"
A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians"
A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians"
Ebook32 pages22 minutes

A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians"

By Gale and Cengage

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A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians," excerpted from Gale's acclaimed Poetry for Students. This concise study guide includes plot summary; character analysis; author biography; study questions; historical context; suggestions for further reading; and much more. For any literature project, trust Poetry for Students for all of your research needs.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 26, 2016
ISBN9781535823548
A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians"

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    A Study Guide for Wendy Rose's "For the White Poets Who Would Be Indians" - Gale

    1

    For the White Poets Who Would be Indian

    Wendy Rose

    1980

    Introduction

    Often, when poets create work that is inspired primarily by anger toward an individual or a group of people, the poem turns out preachy or too emotional. Wendy Rose’s poem For the White poets who would be Indian, first published in Lost Copper (1980), is based on her feelings of indignation toward non-Native American writers who claim they can understand how it feels to be Indian and that they can create work truly from an Indian perspective. Rose’s contention is that this cannot be done. She does not call out any White poets in particular in this poem, but she does offer descriptive insight into the way they go about their work and the possible reasons that these poets choose to adopt another culture as their own—at least in their poetry. Because Rose is able to present her beliefs in graphic, illuminating language (as opposed to an overly emotional diatribe) and to maintain a sense of honest poetry throughout the piece, it does not fall into the ranks of dull sermonizing.

    For the White poets who would be Indian draws upon the idea of white shamanism, a term used by some Native American poets—including Rose—to address the issue of white writers pretending to be so entrenched in Native American ways and beliefs that they are just as Indian as those born into the culture. The word shaman refers to a very powerful and revered figure in many tribal societies, indicating one who acts as a link between the visible human world and the invisible spirit world. A shaman practices magic or sorcery to heal the sick or to control natural forces. The term white shamanism, then, is a sarcastic comment on the hypocrisy displayed by white writers who would be Indian,

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