Sunday, September 23, 2012

Phase 3


Basketball is seen as a central part of Sherman Alexie’s The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fist Fight in Heaven because it is a sport played by one of the main characters, Victor, as a source of belonging and healing and makes new living legends on the reservation.
                In “Indian Education” we first learn that Victor started playing basketball when he was in the fifth grade and it is something he followed all the way up throughout high school. While he was the only Indian on an all white basketball team in high school he still played for the love of the sport not because of anything it had to do with his race (even though his race had  always seemed to be on display playing for a team with the mascot of “The Indians”).  Victor continues to play basketball until he messes up his knees while getting hit during a game. While in the story “Jesus Christ’s Half-Brother is Alive and Well on the Spokane Indian Reservation” in never says directly that the person caring for James is Victor, Alexie makes subtle hints with the references to having difficulty with drinking and sobriety and basketball feeling almost second nature to the character. This is seen when the character starts trying to sober up and starts playing basketball again and says “the old feelings and old moves are still there in my heart and in my fingers” (127).  Basketball has played a very important part in Victor’s life and it seems the only time when he’s not playing is in a time where drinking was his life.
                In the story “The Only Traffic Light on the Reservation Doesn’t Flash Red Anymore” Alexie really shows how important basketball is on the reservation because it makes living legends that everybody in town knows about. Even though Victor and Adrian seem to be at a much later stage in their lives they still know about all the up and coming basketball stars on the reservation like Julius Windmaker who is only 15 years old. Even in his young age Victor refers to him as “the latest in a long line of reservation basketball heroes” but Julius deserves the recognition with all the work he has already put in (45). They make mention of some of these basketball heroes like Silas Sirius who only scored on basket in his entire career but is still seen as a legend with Victor and Adrian still retelling the story of his single basket. This illustrates the point that Victor makes on the next page with saying “A reservation hero is remembered forever. In fact, their status grows over the years as their story is told and retold” (48). While the hero status never goes away on the reservation and they make walking legends, they are always looking for a new basketball star to look for. After Julius has a bad game where he wasn’t as good as expected there is already a shift in every bodies focus to new stars, even with Victor and Adrian talking about the 3rd grader Lucy. While Victor talks about the hurt that comes with losing a basketball player that they saw could make it all the way they also move onto looking at the new person to take their place already elevating kids to a living legend status. 

6 comments:

  1. I really like how you mention Victor playing on an all white team. To me, that's significant because Victor was able to excel at a white man's sport surrounded by white competitors. To me that's why the basketball players are seen as heroes. They're succeeding at a white man's game, and it's not often that people on the reservation succeed in the white world.

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    1. ive never thought of basketball as a white man's game, according to most of the Indians on the reservation, they invented the game before the white man did, and thats why they are better at it. I see Victor being on the all white team to show that he is better than them and its his game. I would like to compare this to America, We as americans think of this country as ours even though we were not here first! they were

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  2. I feel very connected to your prompt. Growing up I played a lot of basketball, and used it as an escape from my own life. The sport brought heroism to the native american culture, and allowed them to excel at a predominately white-man sport.

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  3. Why is it that we make famous sports figures our heroes? To the characters in the novel, anybody who was good at basketball in the reservation was instantly a hero and somebody to look up too. Why is this if the only thing they did was play basketball. Did they really do something important that really helped the reservation?

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    1. Good point Eugenio. I thought it was interesting that when someone got valedictorian...there was no praise but a free throw got a lot of attention. Being smart could've gotten them farther than making a few good shots.

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  4. I like what you are talking about Eugenio with looking up to somebody that hasn't really done anything other than play a sport. I look at it like what happened with Michael Vick and few years back and the dog fighting incident. Like yes he shouldn't have been doing something terrible like that but still he plays football and nothing else really, nobody told you to look up to him it just sort of happened with the way our culture looks at sports these days. And I can see it being very important on the reservation because they don't have much else in their lives.

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