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A Yellow Raft in Blue Water | Erdrich and Dorris' Mixed-bloods and Multiple Narratives
In the following excerpt, Owens discusses the significance of identity in the lives of three generations of Native American women.
At the end of Michael Dorris' novel A Yellow Raft in Blue Water (1987), one of the book's three narrators and protagonists, Aunt Ida, is braiding her hair as a priest watches: "As a man with cut hair, he did not identify the rhythm of three strands, the whispers of coming and going, of twisting and tying and blending, of catching and of letting go, of braiding." The metaphor of braiding—tying and blending—illuminates the substance of this novel, for it is, like [Louise] Erdrich's works, a tale of intertwined lives caught up in one another the way distinct narrative...
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- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Introduction
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- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Michael Dorris Biography
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Themes
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- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Historical Context
- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Critical Overview
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- A Yellow Raft in Blue Water: Essays and Criticism
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