His Kiowa identity influenced his novel The Way to Rainy Mountain. -apex
Because it contrasts mythical, historical, and personal account.
Geography affected the Native Americans in the same way as it affects all groups of people. Native Americans had to learn how to work with what the land gave them. They had to hunt animals indigenous to mountainous land as well as learn how to grow crops on land that was flat and dry.
More than half of the population was not represented at the Constitutional Convention: women and people of color, whether free or slave. It could also be argued that working-class people were not represented; nearly all of the people who attended the Convention were lawyers, large landowners, or wealthy in some way.
The Great Compromise helped both the small and large states because they would both be equally represented in the Senate. This was beneficial to the small states and the large states were happy because the House of Representatives would be based on population.
Momaday combines elements of one of his personal journeys with the migration of the Kiowa.
the migration of the kiowa
The two journeys in The Way to Rainy Mountain that are mirrored are the journey of the Kiowa tribe from Montana to Oklahoma and Momaday's similar journey in discovering his heritage.
not the moon through the stars or w/e
not the moon through the stars or w/e
The structure of 'The Way to Rainy Mountain' mirrors two journeys: the physical journey of the Kiowa tribe from their homeland to their settlement at Rainy Mountain, and the spiritual journey of the author N. Scott Momaday reconnecting with his Kiowa heritage and ancestral roots through storytelling and reflection.
The Way To Rainy Mountain ends with a poem.
"The Way to Rainy Mountain" by N. Scott Momaday has approximately 90 pages.
Momaday uses the genre of the west in telling the way to rainy mountain.
He writes part of it as history, part folklore, part memoir. He writes in different voices, and changes between them as the story continues. The two journeys in The Way to Rainy Mountain that are mirrored are the journey of the Kiowa tribe from Montana to Oklahoma and Momaday's similar journey in discovering his heritage. The structure of the novel (switching off between the voices of each journey, interspersed with historical events), helps the reader to see how the journeys are similar.
He writes part of it as history, part folklore, part memoir. He writes in different voices, and changes between them as the story continues. The two journeys in The Way to Rainy Mountain that are mirrored are the journey of the Kiowa tribe from Montana to Oklahoma and Momaday's similar journey in discovering his heritage. The structure of the novel (switching off between the voices of each journey, interspersed with historical events), helps the reader to see how the journeys are similar.
a poemThe Closing In," Epilogue, "Rainy Mountain Cemetery."