Othering in Alexie and the Classroom Othering Essay

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Othering in Alexie and the Classroom

Othering in Alexie and classroom

Otherness describes a relationship that is imposed by dominant groups with the power to define who is undesirable or lower-status. This a power relationship where the dominant members justify their own privilege even if the power group is the minority, with a classic example in South African Apartheid where a white minority kept the wealth, power and legal decision-making status for themselves even though they were far outnumbered. Othering by males against females provides a more balanced example where domination results in different pay for equal work; different social roles and different unpaid work expectations for example.

Most often however, stigmatization takes place by dominant groups against minorities where the dominant majority designates itself the norm, and then enacts values the minority group can never share. This allows the dominant group to assign others temporary privileges, but if the identifying stigma is visible at all times, this temporary privilege can be revoked at any time. This allows any dominant member the right to put the other "in their place" because they can never transcend the stigma. These relationships become institutionalized through law, tradition, and ultimately result in "reverse racism" or individual and group self-identification with the stigma as taken for granted and unwanted, but inescapable and appropriate.

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B, C. Othering in Sherman Alexie's "This Is What It Means To Say Phoenix, Arizona" takes place on multiple dimensions between individuals, by groups to individuals, and by groups to other groups. Groups labeled 'other' impose that status on individuals even within their own membership. Not all dominant-culture individuals discriminate this way, and the status as other can be suspended when dominant-group insiders find that useful. These relationships are focused most intensely in Alexie's character Thomas Builds-the-Fire, in relation to the protagonist Victor, and between both these individuals relative to the groups they participate in or are shut out of.

On the widest level, both men and Victor's dead father are marginalized by the dominant society as part of a total group that includes all the Indians in the story at least. They live in fact on a reservation, a place set aside for Indians. This 'other' status runs so deep that even if a tribal member dies, sometimes the only reason anyone notices is by the smell a week later (Alexie, 1993, p. 68). All the Indians are victims of this designation as "them" by the dominant group. Not all hegemonic-group members actively persecute them, as the encounter with "Cathy" demonstrates, but this is because they were temporarily members of a transitional group 'people on an….....

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"Othering In Alexie And The Classroom Othering", 10 July 2011, Accessed.5 June. 2026,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/othering-alexie-classroom-othering-51456