@article{293d5c49-c5a4-4f33-bde9-e1e65af610df, author = {Agnieszka Gondor-Wiercioch}, title = {Literary Cousins of Reservation Dogs : A Comparative Analysis of Works by Louise Erdrich and Sherman Alexie}, journal = {Media Research Issues}, volume = {2022}, number = {Volume 65, Issue 4 (252)}, year = {2022}, issn = {0555-0025}, pages = {53-65},keywords = {Native American fiction; indigenous film; young protagonist construction; Indian stereotype deconstruction; survival humour}, abstract = {The article is a comparative analysis of contemporary Native American fiction (Louise Erdrich’s novels Love Medicine and The Bingo Palace, Sherman Alexie’s short story collec­tion The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven), and the series Reservation Dogs by Taika Waititi and Sterlin Harjo. The aim of the article is to indicate similarities in the construction of young protagonists of the selected literary texts and the series, with an emphasis on Indian stereotype deconstruction, survival humour and the genres. This last category encompasses bildungsroman, road novel/story, homing novel/story and magical realism. The methodology used in the article includes cultural studies, postcolonialism and postmodernism. The author of the article wants to argue that many stylistic devices used in the character construction in Reservation Dogs have appeared much earlier in the canonical works of Native American fiction and Waititi and Harjo seem to enter into an intelligent dialogue with the literary tradition because similarly to it, they affirm contemporary indigenous culture, stress its connection with popular culture and very often introduce the black humour which turns Native Americans into subjects of their narratives and gives them back control over their own stories.}, doi = {10.4467/22996362PZ.22.038.16496}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/zeszyty-prasoznawcze/article/literary-cousins-of-reservation-dogs-a-comparative-analysis-of-works-by-louise-erdrich-and-sherman-alexie} }