Home > A Yellow Raft in Blue Water Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Character Conflicts
A Yellow Raft in Blue Water | Character Conflicts
In the following excerpt, Narveson contends that the narratives given by the three characters are just as perplexing to them as to the reader. Each character is carefully sorting out the overlapping conflicts in their lives.
It used to be said...that there were few memorable women characters in American fiction. I haven't heard that said lately, but I am reminded of it because Michael Dorris' novel has three memorable women characters as narrators.
This three-generational story unfolds backward. Its narrators, each telling one large chunk of the story, are what we have been persuaded to call Native American, but what they themselves call Indian. The first to narrate is fifteen-year-old Rayona whose father is black but who is raised by her Indian mother, about whom she knows much and doesn't know more;...
[The entire page is 1211 words long]
Join eNotes
The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:
Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Introduction
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Summary
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Michael Dorris Biography
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Themes
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Style
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Historical Context
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Critical Overview
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Character Analysis
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Essays and Criticism
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Topics for Further Study
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Media Adaptations
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: What Do I Read Next?
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Bibliography and Further Reading
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Pictures
- Copyright
Tell a friend about A Yellow Raft in Blue Water at eNotes.
