Constructing Identities and Narrating the Self: Sherman Alexie’s Flight as a Fictional Memoir
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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In: Op. Cit.: Revista de Estudos Anglo-Americanos/A Journal of Anglo-American Studies, Vol. 2nd Series, No. 4, 6, 30.11.2015, p. 1-19.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Constructing Identities and Narrating the Self: Sherman Alexie’s Flight as a Fictional Memoir
AU - Völz, Sabrina
PY - 2015/11/30
Y1 - 2015/11/30
N2 - Flight (2007), Sherman Alexie takes a pristine approach to Native identityand the complexity of being Native in contemporary U.S. society. In this both highly praised and somewhat criticized novel, personal and social identities are closely linked to history and memory as well as to violence – past, present, and future. As an orphan of hybrid heritage, Zits, the teenage protagonist, is born into a culture that excludes him from participation. Through time traveling, he not only recounts and reflects on episodes in history through the lens of five male characters but is also launched on a spiritual journey. From this vantage point, Zits reflects on multi-temporal levels of the past and on conflicting identities – his own and those of others whose bodies he occupies. Instead of continuing to be victimized by the ‘master’ narrative, the protagonist becomes the master narrator of his own circular life story, and ultimately of a ‘real’,more unified self.
AB - Flight (2007), Sherman Alexie takes a pristine approach to Native identityand the complexity of being Native in contemporary U.S. society. In this both highly praised and somewhat criticized novel, personal and social identities are closely linked to history and memory as well as to violence – past, present, and future. As an orphan of hybrid heritage, Zits, the teenage protagonist, is born into a culture that excludes him from participation. Through time traveling, he not only recounts and reflects on episodes in history through the lens of five male characters but is also launched on a spiritual journey. From this vantage point, Zits reflects on multi-temporal levels of the past and on conflicting identities – his own and those of others whose bodies he occupies. Instead of continuing to be victimized by the ‘master’ narrative, the protagonist becomes the master narrator of his own circular life story, and ultimately of a ‘real’,more unified self.
KW - North American Studies
KW - Fictional Memoir
KW - Sherman Alexie
KW - Sherman Alexie
KW - Flight
KW - Fictional Memoir
KW - Native Identity
KW - Literature studies
KW - Native American Literature
KW - Sherman Alexie
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 2nd Series
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - Op. Cit.: Revista de Estudos Anglo-Americanos/A Journal of Anglo-American Studies
JF - Op. Cit.: Revista de Estudos Anglo-Americanos/A Journal of Anglo-American Studies
SN - 2182-9446
IS - 4
M1 - 6
ER -