coyote teachings

coyote pedagogy is a term sometimes used to describe king’s writing strategies (margery fee and jane flick). discuss your understanding of the role of coyote in the novel.
                            – assignment given by erika paterson

sartore, joel. “coyote.” national geographic. 2015

coyote is known as the transformer to the okangan and salish people. in the novel “green grass running water” by thomas king coyote is found showing his transformation attributes by playing many roles, by being in many places at once and by weaving between the stories being told – by being both in them and outside of them.

at the beginning of the novel coyote begins to take us on a surreal and deep adventure, into the the beginning of time and the being of this world as we know it. coyote summons another peoples cultural story, unconsciously, from his own dreams:

“who are you? says that dream. are you someone important?
“i’m coyote,” says coyote. “and i am very smart.”
i am very smart, too, says that dream. I must be coyote.
“no,” says coyote. “you can’t be coyote. but you can be a dog.” (1-2)

and so god is created, out of coyote’s dreams. and coyote has no control over the god that emerges. the god is not all powerful, and neither is coyote. there are many things happening that connect and intersect the different beings, and there is a flow, there is cause and effect, but with no certainity of what results will occur from the things that go on. the thread that coyote takes us on and “their multiple interconnections imply the syncretic and transformative abilities of oral stories” (55 blanca).

coyote blurs the lines. coyote is mischievous and coy, and although his moments of emergence in the novel seem few and far between, his brief and subtle appearances are actually quite influential. as margery fee and jane flick write about coyote’s role in the mishmash creation story blend that king recounts: “rules are made for coyotes to break! apart from ignoring borders between animal and human (or divine and human, if you prefer), [his] subversive move makes the central story of the christian religion into a coyote story, and repeats the novel’s overall strategy which subsumes european culture and history into an aboriginal framework, and counters a patriarchal religion with a matriarchal one. (136)

i believe that most importantly, coyote’s presence serves to keep our eyes open. to remind us to step back from the unfolding of stories, to make space for chaos and the unknown in our lives and in our understanding. in blanca’s article “theorizing the world of the novel”, king’s literature methodology is assessed by it’s uniqueness, which is not simply post-modern as many might assume by it’s chaotic structure, but rather it it is entirely different literary theory that comes from aboriginal storytelling:
“king uses an interactive and dialogic literary theory to dismantle the kind of theory that sees novels as closed systems. he writes northrop frye and structuralist literary poetics into green grass, running water, for example, in a way that suggests viewing western theory through the lens of native experience and traditions, rather than the other way around. ” (45)

coyote crosses into the world of abstract where he interacts with his own dreams and engages in a struggle with them. what occurs with coyote is whimsical, but also powerful. the things coyote engages with, as light-hearted as his sociabilities are, have major impacts on what is occurring. coyote connects us with the story being told. so that we are also engaged in the occurrences going on. coyote is constantly dialoguing with the narrator, influencing the story at it’s very telling. “coyote is here and now” (53)

 

works cited

Chester, Blanca. “Green Grass Running Water: Theorizing the World of the Novel.” Canadian Literature 161-162. (1999). Web. Accessed Nov 9 2016.

Flick, Jane. “Reading Notes for Thomas King’s Green Grass Running Water.” Canadian Literature 161-162. (1999). Web. Accessed Nov 9 2016.

King, Thomas. “Green Grass Running Water”. Toronto, ON: Harper Collins Publishers Limited, 1993. Print.

 

Accessed Nov 9 2016.

Sartore, Joel. “Coyote”. National Geographic. 2015. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/c/coyote/. Accessed Nov 9 2016.

Spam prevention powered by Akismet