"The Joy of Reading
and Writing: Superman and Me"--An Essay by Sherman Alexie
A smart Indian is a dangerous
person, widely feared and ridiculed by Indians and non-Indians alike. I fought with my
classmates on a daily basis. They wanted me to stay quiet when the non-Indian teacher
asked for answers, for volunteers, for help. We were Indian children who were expected to
be stupid. Most lived up to those expectations inside the classroom but subverted them on
the outside. They struggled with basic reading in school but could remember how to sing a
few dozen powwow songs. They were monosyllabic in front of their non-Indian teachers but
could tell complicated stories and jokes at the dinner table. They submissively ducked
their heads when confronted by a non-Indian adult but would slug it out with the Indian
bully who was 10 years older. As Indian children, we were expected to fail in the
non-Indian world. Those who failed were ceremonially accepted by other Indians and
appropriately pitied by non-Indians.
I refused to fail. I was smart. I was arrogant. I was lucky. I read books late into the
night, until I could barely keep my eyes open. I read books at recess, then during lunch,
and in the few minutes left after I had finished my classroom assignments. I read books in
the car when my family traveled to powwows or basketball games. In shopping malls, I ran
to the bookstores and read bits and pieces of as many books as I could. I read the books
my father brought home from the pawnshops and secondhand. I read the books I borrowed from
the library. I read the backs of cereal boxes. I read the newspaper. I read the bulletins
posted on the walls of the school, the clinic, the tribal offices, the post office. I read
junk mail. I read auto-repair manuals. I read magazines. I read anything that had words
and paragraphs. I read with equal parts joy and desperation. I loved those books, but I
also knew that love had only one purpose. I was trying to save my life.
Despite all the books I read, I am still surprised I became a writer. I was going to be a
pediatrician. These days, I write novels, short stories, and poems. I visit schools and
teach creative writing to Indian kids. In all my years in the reservation school system, I
was never taught how to write poetry, short stories or novels. I was certainly never
taught that Indians wrote poetry, short stories and novels. Writing was something beyond
Indians. I cannot recall a single time that a guest teacher visited the reservation. There
must have been visiting teachers. Who were they? Where are they now? Do they exist? I
visit the schools as often as possible. The Indian kids crowd the classroom. Many are
writing their own poems, short stories and novels. They have read my books. They have read
many other books. They look at me with bright eyes and arrogant wonder. They are trying to
save their lives. Then there are the sullen and already defeated Indian kids who sit in
the back rows and ignore me with theatrical precision. The pages of their notebooks are
empty. They carry neither pencil nor pen. They stare out the window. They refuse and
resist. "Books," I say to them. "Books," I say. I throw my weight
against their locked doors. The door holds. I am smart. I am arrogant. I am lucky. I am
trying to save our lives. 'circumference'? "--were nearly always uncanny and
unanswerable, but prompted endless discussion (abruptly cut off by another oracular
question on a different matter). The effect of these lessons was only felt hours later, at
home, in bed with the book. It was then that I read Dickinson, and listened--because I had
been taught to challenge her--as she took the traditional language of belief, emptied it
of any reassurance, then charged it anew with a startling force. In their own way, her
methods mirrored my teacher's . . . and became my teacher. Reading, I'd been taught, means
questioning, sensing that what you read is unfinished until completed in the self. The
first text is the soul. And the last.
From The Most Wonderful Books (Milkweed Editions).
Online Source: http://www.fallsapart.com/superman.html
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