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“Some Indians feel that to spend too much time
among white people is to risk losing everything
we call our own, even though that idea is itself
loosely defined.”
Throughout much of Apple, Eric Gansworth interrogates how Indigenous identity can feel precarious in the face of white colonialism and cultural genocide. Many people feel a strong need to protect Indigenous culture and hold onto what is left after colonization.
“As he built up his resistance to new diseases, he also
developed resistance to walking away from the world
where his roots lay, growing deeper and tougher with each
trip back to the homestead.”
Gansworth’s grandfather escaped the full effects of the residential schools because he spent so much time at home, recovering from illness. As a result, the school was never able to fully cut him off from his culture, as they did so many Indigenous children.
“After you had been wiped clean of the only name
you’d ever known, next came your clothes and your
hair, your language, then your religion, your way of
understanding the world, your culture, your self.”
Residential schools aimed to completely erase everything Indigenous about the children who attended them, from their names to their language, religion, and clothing. This is one of the major forms of cultural genocide in North America.
“She studies, and waits for the world to change,
with no knowledge of how she might be
a part of that change, beyond the background
singer life, echoing or harmonizing with the white
voices who have all the access to the microphones
and cameras, and transmitters, sending signals out
into the world, demanding the change we all know
would come at some point, maybe in our lifetimes
if we were lucky…or if we were not.”
Gansworth dreams of a better future for his sister, who is studying hard to fit into a world that does not want her to succeed. He imagines a future in which Indigenous voices are not in the background, but rather at the forefront of change.
“(You can see here that no matter how hard they tried,
I was always going to have a different orientation,
that my antenna was tuned in to a more obscure channel.)”
Gansworth feels alienated and completely different from his family members. The reference to having a different “orientation” alludes to Gansworth’s sexuality.
“Maybe his family’s super
power is that his mother is not romanced by a white man and then
murdered a couple of years after they marry, once the oil shares
are considered her widower’s property.”
This quote refers to the Osage murders that took place from 1918 to 1931, a series of murders of members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma. Oil had been discovered on the Osage reservation. Because the Osage Nation had retained mineral rights to their land, several members of the nation became very wealthy; however, they were killed by white Americans who wanted the rights to the oil.
“It’s 1971, and anyone able to ignore the targets
that appear on our backs is a fool or has already
had some kind of brain damage.”
In 1971, Indigenous protestors occupied Alcatraz Island to protest the treatment of Indigenous people in America. Other protests took place across the country the same year. While many were successful in gaining civil rights for Indigenous Americans, they also resulted in heightened tensions between Indigenous groups and law enforcement.
“As we stare at this static image, we realize that even on color TV,
Indians are frozen in the past, designed for a black-and-white world
instead of the brightly colored one where we live together, and breathe
current air, feeding trees and taking oxygen from them, an exchange
we did for centuries before others arrived, claiming new borders,
and driving us away because we didn’t use land the way they did.”
Gansworth notes that representations of Indigenous people in America are rooted in the past, effectively saying that Indigenous people are not present in the modern world. Relegated to the past, Indigenous people are stripped of agency, their colonization “justified” because more modern people have come to take their place.
“You know already that to be different is to be separated, set apart
from others, no matter how minor and insignificant the difference.”
Gansworth keenly feels all of the little things that set him apart from those around him. He and his family are outsiders on the reservation because they are Onondaga. Even within his own family, he is an outsider.
“But we didn’t want to be considered
equal and included, didn’t want to be considered American.
We just wanted to survive, practice our beliefs
as we saw fit.”
The idea of equality means different things to different people. According to Gansworth, equality for Indigenous people does not mean assimilation into American culture. It means the ability to self-determine.
“What happens when you’ve been chosen to receive a message, but there’s no one to help you translate it?”
One of the ways that Gansworth feels cut off from his history and culture is through his lack of knowledge about traditional practices. He does not know how to take part in certain aspects of his culture, and no one can help him connect to or understand them.
“They wanted
Ted to use their mirror, but he peered in
his own, instead, and his was long and wide,
and the mercury on its back surface shone
clear, or maybe its imperfections were ones
he knew best because they were his own.”
Ted C. Williams’ book The Reservation is an autobiography about his experience growing up on the same reservation Gansworth grew up on. Many people on the reservation have not read it because the book does not reflect their personal experiences; this is one of the challenges of autobiographies.
“I ask why they still use the pan, repaired handle offering
a second chance to strike, at best, and she returns
that you can’t let fear run your life, so you accept
the aerodynamics of nature, appreciate the clear skin
you have, and know, for its finite hunger, you should thank the fire.”
In this poem, Jaboozie’s sister tells Gansworth that they cannot allow fear to rule their lives. The metaphor here goes beyond the grease fire: She is telling him that the things that scar him have limited power. Fire, though destructive, is also transformative.
“Even when we look like we are doing
the same thing you are, we are really
doing our own thing in the same space
you do your thing, so you won’t try
to tug us further into your world with
some other idea. Some of us master
this camouflage easier than others.”
Gansworth explores the differences between Indigenous and white American courting rituals: Indigenous people must camouflage their actions in order to maintain independence. By “doing [their] own thing” in the same space as white people, Indigenous people attempt to maintain their culture while also blending in with broader American society.
“Not demanding that I rise or fail to meet expectations, the places I know best
have no room for me. No map points me in any direction beyond Dog Street.”
After high school, Gansworth feels directionless and lost. He does not know where his future will take him and cannot imagine a life beyond his home on Dog Street.
“Some people grant inexplicable value or judgment
on saturation levels of either melanin or anthocyanin,
but once the skin is flayed, the insides are remarkably similar.
It’s good to know some things stay the same.”
Gansworth addresses the arbitrary values assigned to skin color, noting that skin color is determined by melanin and nothing else. Beneath a layer of superficial skin, he argues, all humans look the same.
“For these two, and for the history of Hollywood, we remain
props, segues, or obstacles to the hero’s next conquest.”
Representation in Hollywood has historically relegated Indigenous people to background props or else enemies to white heroes. Thematically supporting The Impacts of Colonialism, this observation notes how Hollywood contributes to the American project of cultural genocide that refuses to see Indigenous people as fully developed people with their own identities and personhood.
“But you and I find each other and know
we will stay together in a world that doesn’t
especially approve of us and the ways we love,
and maybe when my mother claimed
there was no word for love, she was
really saying that no word could encompass
all the different ways we find it.”
Gansworth and his partner, Larry, stay together despite all the challenges they face as an interracial gay couple. Gansworth notes the limitations of the word “love” when it does not fully encompass all the ways that people experience the emotion.
“We still need to sing the blues
but in the intervening years
we have forgotten the chords
that would take us home, so
if you did commit them
to memory, even a couple,
could you pass them on?”
Gansworth questions how people can pass on knowledge when memory is such a fragile thing. Even when knowledge is gained, it can be lost before it is passed on.
“In his eventual book, he can find no true place
for my voice, because as an Onondaga in my
family, I am forever from Tuscarora, but also
eternally not of Tuscarora, as if my life lacking
symmetry did not truly exist, as if mine was
the voice of a ghost, since he could not find
a place to file it, in the real world of his ordering.”
The ethnographer does not know how to categorize Gansworth because he does not fit into a box. Categorizing human beings is rarely a neat, clear-cut process; people often exist outside the classifications that white anthropologists and ethnographers devise. These attempts to classify ironically are sometimes even used to support the racist views that many of those who devise them intend to quash.
“When we are born outsiders, we sometimes
find bridges we can make with our own stories
embracing the ways they are connected, instead
of pointing out the gaps between the two sides.”
Although Gansworth has felt like an outsider for much of his life, his nephew’s marriage is a bridge. He feels that he has gained a sense of belonging in his community. He begins to see the connections rather than the differences.
“She fans
the tobacco smoke, and what rises
to circle the moon, head home
to the Skyworld,
is our loss,
your spirit,
some smoke,
a little ash.”
When Gansworth’s mother dies, his family ushers her spirit to the Skyworld via tobacco smoke, an Indigenous practice in Nations across North America. Gansworth has always associated his mother with the smell of ash and smoke; in this send-off, the comparison comes full circle.
“I don’t know why I read them. Anything I’ve lost
is never coming back and I already know that.”
Gansworth has lost many things over the course of his life. He reads the lost and found section of a newspaper, as if some of the things he has lost could show up in the “found” section, but he knows that everything he has lost is gone for good.
“I
think of what the minister said when my brother died: “The rain
comes and washes away his prints, so we can move on.” I wished
for drought instead, so we wouldn’t lose every trace, but it rained
for a week straight, and despite it being April, three feet of snow
landed to make sure the job was done for good.”
Gansworth does not want to “move on” when his brother dies. He wants his brother’s footprints, his memory, preserved forever in this world. Instead, it rains and then snows after his brother’s death, forcing him to look toward the future.
“No matter what sequence of words I write, no
matter what images I reimagine, I wonder if
they will ever understand this is not just an act
of celebration but a declaration of survival.
We are still here, despite everything that has
been taken away any moment we aren’t looking.”
Gansworth concludes his memoir by reflecting that this book is not simply a celebration of his life but also a reminder of Indigenous resilience and survival. Indigenous people continue to survive despite the Impact of Colonialism and despite everything that has been taken from them.
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