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The Absolutely True Diary of A Part-Time Indian Themes
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Themes. Identity Home Race Poverty Literature and Writing Mortality Friendship Hopes, Dreams, and Plans Education Tradition and Customs.

Dec 29, 2015

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John Nash
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Page 1: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

The Absolutely True Diary of A Part-Time Indian

Themes

Page 2: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Theme List

Identity Home Race Poverty Literature and Writing Mortality Friendship Hopes, Dreams, and Plans Education Tradition and Customs

Page 3: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Identity

Arnold starts The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian feeling like the reservation outcast, but once he transfers to the fancy white school in Reardan, he becomes a basketball star who gets carried around on people's shoulders.

When Arnold transfers to Reardan, he sees himself as having two different selves: Junior from the outcast from the reservation and Arnold from the white high-school at Reardan. The rest of the novel is really all about reconciling these two different selves.

Page 4: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Home

Sherman Alexie dedicates The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian to his two hometowns: Wellpinit and Reardan. Like Alexie, Arnold Spirit, Jr. has two hometowns as well. There is his family's home on the Spokane Indian Reservation, and then there's his place at the white high school in Reardan. Though he should be at home in both places, sometimes Arnold feels like a complete stranger. In the end, Arnold stops thinking of home so much as a specific place, and instead learns to be at home among many different people. As Rowdy tells him, he is a "nomad"

Page 5: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Race

Race is a pretty huge deal for The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Why? Because it gives Arnold Spirit, Jr. a good deal of trouble in his search for self. Arnold feels like he's only half an Indian – or as he says a "part-time Indian" – once he transfers to the white school of Reardan. He then gets split into two: Junior on the Indian reservation and Arnold in his white high school. This all suggests that one's racial or ethnic identity can change depending on place or social setting.

Page 6: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Poverty

One of the most compelling aspects of The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is that we see firsthand how devastating and totally awful poverty is not only for an individual, but for an entire community. We see how poverty has squashed hope on the reservation: how alcoholism is everywhere, a condition that leads to tons and tons of senseless death. Though poverty may not teach us anything (as Arnold is quick to tell us), Arnold's fight for a better life inspires us – and gives us hope that things can change.

Page 7: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Literature and Writing

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is a novel that explores the many different relationships people have to literature and writing. For Arnold, writing and drawing become a

means of reaching out and connecting to others. He refers to his drawings, after all, as little "life boats" .

For Gordy, books and knowledge have a way of expanding the world into a place of infinite possibility (Chapter 12).

On the other hand, for Mary, reading and writing romance novels provide an escape from her existence on the reservation (Chapter 5).

Similarly, Rowdy reads cheesy comic books in order to live a whole different life where people are happy and things are all sunshine and lollipops (3.114).

Page 8: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Mortality

Though our narrator Arnold Spirit is only fourteen years of age, he is confronted with the death of his loved ones over and over and over again. For Arnold, death is pretty much relentless, and comes knocking at his family's door time after time. With bodies piling up left and right in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Arnold finds that death is a very hard thing to cope with to cope with – especially when it is senseless. That is, the death Arnold is confronted with is primarily the result of poverty or alcoholism.

Page 9: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Friendship

Arnold's main friend – and only friend – on the reservation in Wellpinit is Rowdy. Once he moves to Reardan, though, he becomes friends with a whole host of people: Penelope, Gordy, Roger, even the school basketball coach. Why is it important that Arnold meet new people and make new friends? What does he learn from these people?

Page 10: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Hopes, Dreams, and Plans The Absolutely True Diary of a

Part-Time Indian is a novel about hope, and how important it is to have it and how it helps us stay afloat. In this novel, we see the consequences of people and even whole communities that lack hope. Why is it important to hope? Who has the most hope? Why do only white people seem to have hope? Why does Arnold have hope?

Page 11: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Education

Reardan High School is a wonderland of chemistry labs, brand new basketball courts, and computer labs. The place is a regular learning hotspot. Arnold leaves the reservation to get a better education in Reardan, but, as we find out, the things that he needs to learn aren't always found in those fancy classrooms. In The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, so much of what Arnold learns has simply to do with attitude.

From Gordy, the Reardan brainiac, Arnold learns about the joys that knowledge can bring. From Coach, the head of basketball at Reardan, Arnold learns about the power of positive thinking – and how a simple phrase ("you can do it") can completely change who you are. Why could Arnold not learn these things at his high school in Wellpinit?

Page 12: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Tradition and Customs

In The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Arnold comes from the Spokane Indian Reservation in Wellpinit, Washington, a place built on tradition and custom. Arnold describes his culture for us in full detail: powwows, fry bread, and many, many funerals. What is Arnold's relationship to these traditions and customs? Arnold also tells us that Indian families tend to stay in one place, a tradition that makes it hard for Arnold to leave the reservation.

Page 13: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

Websites used…

http://www.shmoop.com/absolutely-true-diary-part-time-indian/themes.html

Page 14: Themes.  Identity  Home  Race  Poverty  Literature and Writing  Mortality  Friendship  Hopes, Dreams, and Plans  Education  Tradition and Customs.

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian shows a different side of American Indian life than do many other books, movies, and paintings. What did you learn about Indians from the novel? And how is it different from what you have previously seen in books, movies, and paintings?