The Battle of Wounded Knee, also known as the Wounded Knee Massacre, a massacre which killed one-hundred fifty unarmed innocent Indians. This massacre was not just a historical event, it continues to linger through the minds and haunt the memories of the Indians living on the reservations today, which is shown in the novel Reservation Blues by Sherman Alexie. In Reservation Blues Alexie takes us through the everyday lives of the Indians living on the Spokane Indian Reservation. From their commodity food to their HUD houses to their alcohol addictions and suicides, the reader experiences all the issues that these Indians have to live with, through the characters’ lives in Reservation Blues. The main characters in Reservation Blues create …show more content…
Years of being mistreated and living in poverty from generations to generations, engraves the harsh memories into the Indians from the early ages of childhood. Alexie provides the reader with brutal memories that Wright and Sherman, record company agents, have of the harming of the Indians: “Wright looked at Coyote Springs. He saw their Indian faces. He saw the faces of millions of Indians, beaten, scarred by smallpox and frostbite, split open by bayonets and bullets. He looked at his own white hands and saw the blood stains there” (244). Even to that day, the historical abominations of the killing of American Indians, still haunts the minds of many. Sheridan, the other record company agent was once a general who oppressed the Indians. Sherman recalls the explicit memory of killing a pregnant Indian woman, and continues to blame the Indians for everything that happened: “The white men did this to us, the white men did that to us. When are you ever going to take responsibility for yourselves” (326). Sheridan also does not fail to rebuke Coyote Springs when they mess up the audition by saying, “You blew it by acting like a bunch of goddamn wild Indians” (236). Sheridan makes his point clear that he believes Indians are wild and uncivilized, which makes the Indians helpless after being given a bad name by the record company agents. Through these quotes, the reader can observe how the American Indians were oppressed by the whites and continue to be discriminated by