Similarities Between Tompkins And Chrystos

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American history began thousands of years ago and it is more engaging into today’s culture. As Jane Tompkins “At the Buffalo Bill Museum- June 1988” and Chrystos “I Have Not Signed a Treaty with The United States Government” are two kinds of literature with the different connection in history. They both have a comparison as they come into a phrase with their mortality and character struggles. The authors bring in their thoughts of what it may state to be an agreement. Their writing takes an unlike direction to the prejudiced action of the Native Americans and how Americans turned the land to their own. The genocide of the Native Americans and America found creatures to be interesting in their own presence. Such as Chrystos and Tompkins bring …show more content…

Jane Tompkins and Chrystos both speak strongly about their learning of history in their own way. It has disappointed them of what path it has taken them. Tompkins added, “In the seventeenth century, 40 million wild buffalo roamed North America; by 1900 all the wild buffalo had been killed except for one herd in northern Alberta” (497). She goes into details into her research to know Buffalo Bill’s adventure who wanted to be remembered more than an entertainer. Tompkins grabs the attention of been more amused with the dead animal being put on display, unlike the Indian exhibit. The history that was brought out by both Tompkins in her study and Bill as the person in the past is a way to connect with the future generation in a much more visual method. As Chrystos addressed, “Everything the United States does to everybody is bad” (508). Poet gathers her emotions and entitlements to conclude her civilization of being a Native American. She argues into how the United States the “Europeans” had Native American adjust in their so-called society. All comes from a much more personal reaction as if Chrystos feels anger to illustrate the history to what may have been changing morals and