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On Sherman Alexie Essay, Research Paper

Kenneth Lincoln

With Sherman Alexie, readers can throw formal questions out the

smokehole (as in resistance to other modern verse innovators, Whitman, Williams, Sexton,

or the Beats). Parodic antiformalism may account for some of Alexie’s mass maverick

appeal. This Indian gadfly jumps through all the hoops, sonnet, to villanelle, to heroic

couplet, all tongue-in-cheeky. "I’m sorry, but I’ve met thousands of Indians,"

he told Indian Artist magazine, Spring 1998, "and I have yet to know of anyone

who has stood on a mountain waiting for a sign." A reader enters the land of MTV and

renascent AIM: a cartoon Pocahontas meets Beavis and Butt-head at the forest’s edge,

Sitting Bull takes on Arnold Schwarzenegger at Wounded Knee ‘73. The Last Real Indian has

a few last words.

A stand-up comedian, the Indian improvisator is the performing text, obviating

too close a textual reading: youngish man, six-foot-two or so, born in 1966 at the height

of hippie nativism, from Wellpinit, Washington, now living in Seattle and taking the fin

de siecle literary world by storm (an Indian Oscar Wilde?). After a century of benign

neglect, Indian literature has hit an inflationary spiral with six-figure book deals and

million-dollar movies. New York publishers have been humping this sassy, talk-back

satirist as the last essentialist hold-out, a commercially successful Crazy Horse of mass

marketing. The "most prodigious" Native American writer to date, Alexie told a

Chicago Sun reporter asking about his brassy novel, Indian Killer, October

1996, to which the reporter queried, "Indian dujour?" Our young hero replied,

"If so, it’s been a very long day. How about Indian du decade?" Millennial

Indian extraordinaire? The reporter raised the controversy over Granta naming

Alexie one of the twenty "Best Young American Novelists" for Reservation

Blues (not a novel), and Sherman snapped: "To say I was on the list because I’m

an Indian is ridiculous: I’m one of the most critically respected writers in the country.

So the Granta critics . . . essentially, fuck ‘em" (October 31, 1996, New

City’s Literary Supplement). Starting with Native American writers, Alexie’s

competition includes no less than Allen, Erdrich, Harjo, Hogan, Momaday, Ortiz, Silko,

TallMountain, Tapahonso, Welch, and Whiteman, among others (not to mention non-Indians

like Toni Morrison, Norman Mailer, Cormac McCarthy, or Rita Dove). If "most

critically respected" in a specific fictional genre of Indian Killer (thriller

violence with racial undertones), his closest rivals are Tony Hillerman, Gerald Vizenor,

Mickey Spillane, and Stephen King, an acknowledged model, John Steinbeck and the Brady

Bunch tossed in. "He’s young," says my elder brother back home, "he’ll

ripen, given time."

A breed Spokane and Coeur d’Alene, not just anybody, but thirteen-sixteenths blood, according

to his poetry: "I write about the kind of Indian I am: kind of mixed up, kind of odd,

not traditional. I’m a rez kid who’s gone urban" (Indian Artist). What kind of

an Indian is this?—a photogenic black mane of hair, dark-framed bifocal glasses,

high-school class president, bookworm nose broken six times by bullies (he reminisces),

English lit college degree from Eastern Washington State (after passing out as a pre-med

student in his anatomy class, twice). His work is wizened with poetic anger, ribald love,

and whipsaw humor. The crazy-heart bear is dancing comically, riding a wobbly unicycle,

tossing overripe tomatoes at his audience. "This late in the 2Oth century," the

poet says in Red Blues, "we still make the unknown ours by destroying

it." His firecat imagination plays tricks on the reader, for our supposed good, for

its own native delight and survival. "You almost / believe every Indian is an

Indian," the poet swears to MarIon Brando.

Sherman: not So much a rhymer in the old sense, as a circus juggler Who can eat apples,

he says, while juggling. A college graduate who played basketball sixteen hours a day to

keep from boozing with his cronies: Seymour chugging beer as a poet writes poetry (up to

the last one that kills you) and Lester dead drunk in the convenience store dumpster.

Alexie’s sister and brother-in-law, passed out in a trailer, died by fire when a window

curtain blew against a hot plate.

The boy mimed everyone in his family and still won’t Stop talking. "I was a

divisive presence on the reservation when I was seven," he told an LA Times reporter,

December 17, 1996. "I was a weird, eccentric, very arrogant little boy. The writing

doesn’t change anybody’s opinion of me." Promoting his new movie, Smoke Signals (coproduced

with Cheyenne-Arapaho director Chris Eyre), the writer describes himself today as

"mouthy, opinionated and arrogant," a court jester’s cross of Caliban, Groucho

Marx, and Lear’s Fool, but underneath, "I’m a sweetheart" (Denver Post, October

20, 1997). He’s the best native example yet of Lewis Hyde’s wiley hinge-maker, Trickster,

the infant Prince of Thieves, Hermes stealing into Olympus to claim legitimacy:

"Wandering aimlessly, stupider than the animals, he is at once the bungling host and

the agile parasite; he has no way of his own but he is the Great Imitator who adopts the

many ways of those around him. Unconstrained by instinct, he is the author of endlessly

creative and novel deceptions, from hidden hooks to tracks that are impossible to

read."

Artistic grist and ironic survival are inseparable in this verse, tracing a short

lifetime of basketball (a team captain "ball hog" in high school), beer, TV, rez

cars falling apart, pony dreams, fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) babies, and fancy-dancing

drunks. "You call it genocide; I call it economics," Custer snorts. A warm-up

for fiction and the movies, poetics are wrapped up in the politics of native poverty ,

torqued metrics, and ethnic protest: dime store Indi’n princesses and back-alley vision

questers, 7-11 heroes and Vietnam vets, Marlon Brando and Crazy Horse. No insurance CEO or

village doctor, Alexie has the near fatal, comic bravado of surviving an everyday rez,

where every day is a blow to the stomach and a blaze of understanding. Being Indian means

you’re hanging on for dear life, hanging in there with catastrophic humor, kicking back at

sunset, staggering through the ‘49 to dawn, laughing your ass off and on again (the short

fiction says), and accepting that bottom line of your neighbor’s butt next to you,

misplaced, displaced, re-relocated into the present Red reality, so real that it hurts. So

unreal in its hurtful beauty, so surreal that it makes you blink and smile to see another

dawn. "How do you explain the survival of all of us who were never meant to

survive?" It’s a long walk from Sitting Bull bearing "hard times" to

Charlie Blackbird "surviving." Alexie takes to Internet chat rooms for essential

defenses of native sovereignty and intercultural access to America’ s power structures,

particularly publishing and the movies.

So, from Momaday’s visionary form, through Welch’s shamanic rhythm, here’s a surreal

trickster savage in two-dimensional poetic cartoon. Rather than close reading or parsing

the lines, his work elicits charged reaction, critical gut response, positive or negative

argument. Reading Alexie’s work triggers a recoil from the shock of Indian reality, like

looking into the Sun Dance sun, going blind, and slowly regaining sight, stars and

blackspots and sunbursts floating across the field of perception, so you know it’s your

perception, anyway, at last, of reality: "whiskey salmon absence,"

the poem "Citizen Kane" ends. Firewater, relocation, vanishing American. The

images, concretely charged as Pound’s Vorticist objects, are loaded in disconnections: the

poison where food swarms, desperate homing, the absence that starves Indians to death.

"Rosebud" is not a child’s movie sled but a desperately poor Sioux reservation

in the Dakotas.

"But, I mean, I really love movies. I always have," Alexie said in

"Making Smoke" (Aboriginal Voices May-June 1998). "I love movies

more than I love books, and believe me, I love books more than I love every human being,

except the dozen or so people in my life who love movies and books just as much as I

do." His favorite films are Midnight Cowboy, The Graduate, and Aliens. The

writer goes on, "I mean, screenplays are more like poetry than like fiction.

Screenplays rely on imagery to carry the narrative, rather than the other way around. And

screenplays have form. Like sonnets, actually. Just as there’s [sic] expectations

of form, meter, and rhyme in a sonnet, there are the same kinds of expectations for

screenplays." There are two dimensions in Alexie’s work, screenplay to verse, often

no more than two characters in the short fiction, The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight

in Heaven. His work is mostly minimalist drama, back to the first Greek plays, alazon

to eiron, dreamer to realist, fool to cynic. Toss in commedia dell’arte, Punch

and Judy, Laurel and Hardy, Amos and Andy, Lewis and Martin, Red Ryder and Little Beaver.

The embedded third dimension of this post-holocaustal comedy is cultural landscape, for

lack of a better term, devastated native homestead. So a third character might be

salvage-surrealist, Old Man absent and implied, as with Welch’s winter-in-the-blood Na’pi.

The third- dimensional axis then is Indi’n humor, a vanishing point of survival in the

canvas of a hidden spirit world, including Trickster mimics, all around and behind us.

Alexie takes Welch’s foxy shaman a skitter-step forward to tease Mary Austin:

"Sweetheart, history / doesn’t always look like horses."

Poetry comes on not so much a text as a comic ruse, a razored one-liner, a reader’s

riff to wake up America. The world is Indian as a coyote magician who makes every ordinary

day a trick of survival, a vanishing act, a raw joke. A reader’s breath catches in the

throat and comes out laughing strange, still . . . a breath it is, of life. It gets you

going, brothers’ and sisters, a buzzing, rattling, weeping, yipping imagination. Cry so

hard you begin to laugh: run so fast you lap your shadow: dream so hard you can’t sleep:

think so hard you startle awake like a child. "Maia gave birth to a wily boy,"

the Homeric hymn begins, "flattering and cunning, a robber and cattle thief, a

bringer of dreams, awake all night, waiting by the gates of the city—Hermes, who was

soon to earn himself quite a reputation among the gods, who do not die." Crossing

Ginsberg with Creeley, Hughes’s Crow with Berryrnan’s Mistah Bones, Alexie brews a homeboy

devil’s own humor. The voice makes junkyard poetry out of broke-down reality, vision out

of delirium tremens, prayer out of laughter. "When my father first smiled," the

poet recalls, "it scared the shit out of me." . . .

Indi’n vaudeville, then, stand-up comedy on the edge of despair; A

late-twentieth-century, quasi-visionary clown tells the truth that hurts and heals in

one-liners cheesy as the Marx Brothers, trenchant as Lenny Bruce, tricky as Charlie Hill’s

BIA Halloween "Trick or Treaty." The, stand-up poet marvels in dismay,

"Imagine Coyote accepts / the Oscar for lifetime achievement." There’s an old

trickster-teacher role here in a young Indian’s hands-jokes draw the line, cut to the

quick, sling the bull, open the talk. "White Men Can’t Drum," Alexie announced

in Esquire Magazine, October 1992, roasting the new-age men’s movement, all the

Wannabe fuss and fustian.

"How do you explain the survival of all of us who were never meant to

survive?" asks the verse straight man.

"There is nothing we cannot survive," the poet swears. Surviving war is the

premise. In The Summer of Black Widows (1996), Alexie’s sixth poetry collection in

as many years (composing by computer), "Father and Farther" (also performed on

the rock cassette, Reservation Blues) recalls a drunken basketball coach and a

losing team. "Listen," his father slurs, "I was a paratrooper in the

war."

"Which war? " the boy-poet asks.

"All of them," he said. Quincentennial facts: Native Americans as a composite

are the only in-country ethnic group that the U.S. has declared war against, 1860-1890.

Some existing 560 reservations, 315 in the lower forty-eight states, are natively seen

from inside as occupied POW camps. Think of it as the delayed stress of contemporary

Indian America: the post- traumatic shock of surviving Columbus to Cotton Mather, Buffalo

Bill Cody to Andy Jackson, Chivington to Custer. "Goddamn," the general says,

again and again, "saber is a beautiful word," in ironic cut against Auden’s

penchant for "scissors." World War I Indian volunteers, as cited, gained Native

Americans dual citizenship in 1924. Code Talkers in World War II made natives national

heroes. Korea, Vietnam, and Desert Storm’ s chemical poisoning brought tribal veterans

into millennial terror.

In 1993, the UCI.A American Indian Studies Center published Old Shins & New

Skins as no. 9 in the Native American Poetry Series. Old shirts, not stuffed new

suits: new ’skins, Redskins reborn, sloughing "old" skins. There are always two

sides to things, bicultural ironies to new-age lies, & the "blessed

ampersand," hip shorthand to a coded new tongue, the with-it Indi’n poet. There’s no

text "set" here as such, but more a radical riff, something spilled over, a

virus, a toxin released, a metastasizing anger. It’s a "reservation of my mind,"

the poet says. The opening epithet equates, "Anger x Imagination = poetry," in

the amplitude & invention of the angry young Indian. One shot short of death, Seymour

says, drink as you write free verse, no matter if "our failures are

spectacular." Maverick Trixter talks back, makes a different kind of poetry for

people with differences: "it was not written for the white literary

establishment," Adrian Louis says in the foreword to Old Skins & New

Shins.

A double buckskin language frays the edges of bicultural America, questions the

multiple meanings of reservation, red, risk, Cody & Crazy Horse, Marlon Brando &

John Wayne, Christ & Custer, who died for your sins. The critic is left with

notes to bumper-sticker poetics, insult & antagonism, the fractious come-hither.

Poetry as disruptive tease, a sideshow of historical truth & poetic hyperbole. Or, to

borrow from the social sciences, "privileged license": tribal teasing tests

boundaries, deepens resilience, insures survival, bets on renewal. Not without the warrior

history of Old English insults, flytyngs, hurled across a river a thousand years

ago in "The Battle ofMaldon." LA South Central Blacks doin’ the dozens, Yer

granmother wears combat boots! The Last Poets in Harlem chant, Niggers like to fuck

each other. . . . El Paso Hispanics drive slow ‘n low riders. Inventories of

abuses, imagined & otherwise: hunger of imagination, poverty of memory, toxicity of

history, all in the face of cultural genocide and racial misrepresentation and out-right

extermination, to challenge musty stereotypes of vanishing, savage, stoic, silent,

shamanic, stuperous Indians. Poetry is never bread enough & doesn’t pay the bills,

"damned from beginning to end," Williams says. Who could quibble aesthetics in

this setting?

money is free if you ‘re poor enough

Are there any connections with canonical American poetry? Start with Langston Hughes’s

essentialist pride in the Harlem Renaissance, "I, too, sing America," not just

Walt Whitman fingering leaves of grass, or Carl Sandburg shouldering Chicago. Allen

Ginsberg howled his native place in the 1950s: the marginalized, dispossessed,

discriminated, hipster, homosexual, Jewish, offbeat antihero. It’s an old revolutionary

American motif, the lost found, the last first, the underdog bites back. Sylvia Plath’s

rage and exhibitionist daring to die for us as Lady Lazarus: "Out of the ash / I rise