Shell Shaker
Author | LeAnne Howe |
---|---|
Cover artist | Jaune Quick-to-See Smith |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Aunt Lute Books |
Publication date | September 2001 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 223 pp |
ISBN | 978-1-879960-61-9 |
Shell Shaker is a novel by LeAnne Howe, a member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. The novel's plot revolves around two tales of murder involving Choctaw political leaders. Set over a 200-year period, it focuses on several generations of the Billy family who try to keep the peace. According to Howe, Shell Shaker is "a book about power, its misuse, and how a community responds. It's not for Indians only."[1]
Title
A shell shaker is a woman who participates in a Choctaw ceremony during which empty turtle shells are tied around a dancer's feet. The dance is a prayer to the spirits to answer a request. The Billy family is descended from the first shell shaker, Grandmother of Birds.
Plot
Shell Shaker links two distant generations of the Billy family. The novel begins in 1738 in Choctaw Mississippi, initially focusing on Red Shoes (an historical Choctaw chief). When Red Shoes' wife (a member of the Red Fox clan of the Chickasaws) is murdered, his Choctaw wife Anoleta is blamed. Anoleta's mother, Shakbatina, sacrifices her life to save her daughter and avert a war between the tribes. Anoleta and her family try to move on as their tribe spends the next decade deciding on action to take against Red Shoes, who plays both sides in what becomes a war which devastates the town of Yanàbi and Anoleta's family.
Shakbatina's descendants live in Durant, Oklahoma in 1991. As fire destroys the land around them, the Choctaw chief Redford McAlester is murdered and assistant chief Auda Billy (his lover) is blamed. Susan Billy, her mother, confesses the murder and Isaac Billy (her uncle) gathers their scattered family to help with the investigation. Plot threads include embezzlement, rape, money laundering and contributions to the Irish Republican Army and the Mafia, with a spiritual facet when an old woman claims to be Sarah Bernhardt.
Themes
- Spirit connection: If a body to which the shilombish (soul) belonged was troubled in life or was murdered, a shadow would remain around the family until the problem was solved. The burial ceremony, popular before Americanization, gave a spirit time to become accustomed to their new world while remaining in the old. Koi Chitto fears that if the Bone Picking Ceremony is carried out too quickly, Shakbatina may not be able to learn her role as a spirit.
- Circular time and nature: Time is circular, and cannot be divided into past and present. The past is present in the later tale, underscoring their similarity; everything returns, and everything remains. "Do not forget that the dead are helping the living", Red Shoes is reminded.[2]
- Connection to the land: According to Choctaw legend, the Nanih Waiya (Mother Mound in present-day Mississippi is their birthplace. Burial practices such as the Bone-Picking Ceremony maintain the connection between the body and the land from which it came.
- Bloodsuckers (sano) and cannibalism: "The book describes this as an individual leader's desire for personal power and that for the tribe, followed by how all this power overtakes him. He becomes corrupt and commits hurtful destructive acts. He devours human life. Howe takes the readers into the minds of the corrupt so that they may be shocked into an understanding of how corruption occurs, and that they may be incited to take a critical look at the actions of their own leaders."[3] Howe draws a parallel with corruption in American society: [The osano are] "everywhere. Since 9/11 within our own country, corporate America leaders, men and women in Congress, people who feed off the blood of others are becoming embarrassingly visible."[4]
- Importance of women: "the Billy sisters in Shell Shaker are "real" Indian women, exercising autonomy in careers as a history professor, a stockbroker and an actor, not oppressed and marginalized figures without power or romanticized Indian princesses, as Indian women are sometimes portrayed by non-Native writers".[5]
- Power of words: Words traditionally have the power to become real if spoken, especially if spoken carelessly. Tema, in her first appearance, displays this when she explains to her English husband why she must suddenly leave home because a spirit called her a man-killer. She describes her fear that the words, now spoken, will become real.
- Family and tribe: The events of the novel draw together the community in Durant and, eventually, the eastern and western divisions of the Choctaw. Howe said that she used this novel to demonstrate the tribal propensity for bringing things together. According to her view of native literature, "Native stories ... seem to pull all the elements together of the storyteller's tribe, meaning the people, the land, and multiple characters and all their manifestations and revelations, and connect these in past, present and future milieus." [6]
- Americanization of natives: From the priests in the earlier story to the boarding schools Susan and her aunts attended in the later tale, the attempt to Americanize Native Americans is present. It is in the background, especially in Auda's lecture. Recounted from memory by Adair, the scene indicates the novel's take on Americanization; Auda's removal is violently opposed by the white supporters of the Historical Society. Father Renoir is seen keeping a diary of his experiences with the Choctaw, but before he leaves he removes a great deal that he feels may embarrass his family and his church. His ability to change history and make it more acceptable by the dominant society represents the greatest power held by white society over Native Americans.
Motifs and images
The novel has a number of motifs and images, with both murders occurring during the autumnal equinox. Burial rituals connect the novel's two time periods.
Smoke is a screen between eras, becoming thicker as the stories begin to meet. Birds appear throughout the novel, which tells the story of the Grandmother of Birds (who becomes a bird to punish Spanish invaders when her husband is killed).
Reception
Shell Shaker has been praised for emphasizing the importance of history in the lives of a Native American group as they deal with decolonization. Taos Pueblo scholar and critic P. Jane Hafen said in 2002, "Howe seamlessly integrates a history of desperate and gruesome fights for survival with modern Faustian pacts with materialism and wealth. At the heart of the story are generations of Choctaw peoples who preserve with ritual gestures of 'life everlasting'".[7]
It is one of the few novels to focus on Choctaw history from the point of view of a native author. According to Ken McCullough, "Although there has been significant scholarship on this historical period in the southeast, between the arrival of De Soto and Removal, no one has written a work of the imagination (of this magnitude) set in this period".[8] The novel presents its characters differently from preconceived American ideas: "The variations in voice among the protagonists show that Howe knows how to imagine different characters, and those figures confirm and challenge stereotypes about Native Americans in a way that can only be productive for all readers."[9]
Style and technique
The novel begins from the point of view of Shakbatina, who describes her death. Except for two later chapters, the remainder is third-person narration. This viewpoint change is part of traditional Choctaw storytelling, giving voices to its characters rather than describing them.
Repetition is used throughout Shell Shaker in situations and quotations to connect the generations. One example is "ten thousand feet of intestines hanging from trees in Yanabi Town", which is finally explained at the end of the novel. Articles such as a porcupine sash and turtle shells pass down, along with their imagery, from generation to generation. The repetition of images, connecting the generations, enforces the themes of circular time and the connection of people.
Memories and flashbacks are used, becoming longer and more frequent as the Billy family attempts to piece together its past. According to writer Lucy Maddox, memory in the novel "alternates scenes from present and the past, conflating ancestral lives and contemporary ones to produce stories about the ways in which identity is both constructed and understood in a tribal context that makes memory more relevant than chronology".[10]
The translated Choctaw language is featured, beginning with Shell Shaker's opening lines. The novel's main themes are illustrated in Choctaw, including the bloodsucker (osano) and the search for the Greatest Giver (Imataha Chitto).
Grandmother Porcupine, a trickster, provides humor as she imparts knowledge to those she chooses (Isaac, Hoppy and Nick). Claiming to be an animal spirit over 400 years old and a protector of the family, she represents "an openness to life's multiplicity and paradoxes".[11]
Criticism
Shell Shaker has been criticized for its portrayal of non-Natives as invariably corrupt. Although the Frenchman Bienville is a sympathetic character, others are viewed as the enemy (inklish okla). Borden, the only British character, is also sympathetic and is accepted by his wife's family at the end of the story. Italian mobsters and Irish gangsters are stereotypical, but "corruption [is not] necessarily a condition of Americans and American society overall, and if it is, then American Indians are participants, not exempt". [12] The novel contains sex and violence, with scenes of rape, war and cannibalism which may be difficult for some readers.
References
- ↑ Howe, LeAnne. "Choctalking On Other Realities." Grinnell Magazine. Winter 1999: 46-51
- ↑ Howe, LeAnne. Shell Shaker, p. 171.
- ↑ Steves, Carolyn. "Review of Shell Shaker" http://web.archive.org/web/20060215105016/http://voices.cla.umn.edu/vg/Critique/review_fiction/shell_shaker_by_leanne_howe.html
- ↑ Howe, LeAnne. "Choctalking On Other Realities." Grinnell Magazine. Winter 1999: 46-51
- ↑ Hollrah, Patrice. "Decolonizing the Choctaws: Teaching LeAnne Howe's Shell Shaker", The American Indian Quarterly 28.1&2 (2004) 73-85 (hosted at muse.jhu.edu, accessed 12 April 2008).
- ↑ Howe, LeAnne. "The Story of America: A Tribalography." Clearing a Path: Theorizing the Past in Native American Studies. Ed. Nancy Shoemaker. New York: Routledge. 2002. 29-48.
- ↑ Hafen, P. Jane. Review of Shell Shaker by LeAnne Howe. MultiCultural Review 11, no. 2 (June).
- ↑ McCullough, Ken. "If You See the Buddha at the Stomp Dance, Kill Him!: The Bicameral World of LeAnne Howe's Shell Shaker." SAIL 15, no. 2 (Summer): 58-69.
- ↑ Schurer, Norbert. "Shell Shaker: Women hold the key to tribe's survival in an ambitious work."
- ↑ Maddox, Lucy. Citizen Indians: Native American Intellectuals, Race and Reform. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2005.
- ↑ Franchot Ballinger, Gerald Vizenor Sacred Reversals: Trickster in Gerald Vizenor's "Earthdivers: Tribal Narratives on Mixed Descent" American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 9, No. 1, The Literary Achievements of Gerald Vizenor (Winter, 1985), pp. 55-59
- ↑ Steeves, Carolyn. "Review of Shell Shaker"