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Debby Dahl EdwardsonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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Sacred Heart School is both a setting and a symbol. It is an environment that evokes a prison mentality. The system forces students to be there against their will and live under the oppressive regime of Father Mulligan. The author’s characterization of Sacred Heart School employs pathetic fallacy in its use of physical descriptions that match the actions, emotions, and motivations of the characters. The students feel negative energy from the trees. This is especially true for the students from the Arctic area of Alaska, where trees are sparse or nonexistent. The trees are a physically oppressive force because they block out the sky and the stars. The trees also add to the secluded nature of the school. Sacred Heart is menacing because it is so isolated from the rest of society that it would be impossible for the students to run away. Sacred Heart School is a setting for trauma and tragedy. Although the students there develop a sacred community of their own, they do so in self-defense: they are victims of institutionalized racism and abuse. The earthquake that damages Sacred Heart is symbolic of forces larger than institutions that punish these institutions for the trauma they inflict.
Language is an important motif in My Name is Not Easy. Language is a major element of identity, both individual and cultural. Language is how humans communicate with one another but also – crucially – within themselves. Language enables humans to contextualize their lived experiences and understand their personhood. Individuals deprived of language inauthentically experience the world around them. School personnel force the students to speak English and physically punish Luke when he speaks his native language. Sacred Heart mistakenly believes that exclusively speaking English will enable Luke to function in a larger society. Luke only wants his own community. As Luke improves his use of English, he loses touch with his culture and his identity. The attempted elimination of Native languages is a form of cultural genocide.
Family is an important motif in My Name is Not Easy. Family is Luke’s motivation and the core of his identity. His relationship with his brothers informs his development of autonomy because he feels responsible for them and loves them. The separation of the children at Sacred Heart from their families is one of the major traumas of their shared experience. The distance between the students and their families threatens their culture and their sense of self. What is more, the absence of their family puts them in physical danger, as shown by the military experimentation on the Eskimo children without parental permission. Family is also symbolized through the friendship and community that develops between the students of Sacred Heart. They come together under a unified crisis and a shared battle with adversity. The family they create is as important to their survival as the families to which they seek to return.
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