Unhomed at home : a postcolonial reading of Sherman Alexie’s “The Search Engine”
“The Search Engine” is a short story by Native American writer Sherman Alexie. The story depicts a quest undertaken by a young urban Indigenous woman to find an enigmatic Indian poet and, by extension, her own postcolonial self. This article proposes to read Alexie’s “The Search Engine” through th...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
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Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2021
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| Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18041/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18041/1/48387-167713-1-PB.pdf |
| Summary: | “The Search Engine” is a short story by Native American writer Sherman Alexie. The story depicts a quest
undertaken by a young urban Indigenous woman to find an enigmatic Indian poet and, by extension, her own
postcolonial self. This article proposes to read Alexie’s “The Search Engine” through the lens of postcolonial
criticism to investigate the text’s anticolonialist ideology and approaches to resist the colonialist domination and
deal with the postcolonial condition. The analysis reveals that the text presents an anticolonialist sentiments
through marginal characters who are conditioned by the sense of unhomeliness as a result of their socioeconomic
disadvantages. The text then subverts the colonialist ideology by secularising Christian terminologies and
revisiting a literary canon from the point of view of the underclass. Finally, the text suggests that conflicting
postcolonial identities can be reconciled and hybridised through respect and recognition at an individual level. |
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