翻訳と辞書 ・ Love Me Two Times ・ Love Me When You Can ・ Love Me with All Your Heart ・ Love Me! ・ Love Me, I Love You ・ Love Me, I'm a Liberal ・ Love Me, If You Dare (TV Series) ・ Love Me, Kelly ・ Love Me, Love Me Not ・ Love Me, Love Me Not (game show) ・ Love Me, Love Me Not (Singaporean TV series) ・ Love Me, Love My Money ・ Love Me, Love My Mouse ・ Love Me, Please Love Me ・ Love means never having to say you're sorry ・ Love Medicine ・ Love Meeting Love ・ Love Meetings ・ Love Mein Ghum ・ Love Message ・ Love Message (film) ・ Love Message (song) ・ Love Metal ・ Love Metal Archives Vol. I ・ Love meter ・ Love Minus Zero ・ Love Minus Zero Recordings ・ Love Minus Zero/No Limit ・ Love Missile F1-11 ・ Love Missile F1-11 (Pop Will Eat Itself Song)
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Love Medicine : ウィキペディア英語版 | Love Medicine
''Love Medicine'' is Louise Erdrich’s first novel, published in 1984. Erdrich revised and expanded the novel for an edition issued in 1993, and then revised it again for the 2009 edition. The book explores 60 years in the lives of a small group of Chippewa (also known as Ojibwa or Anishinaabe) living on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota. ''Love Medicine'' won the 1984 National Book Critics Circle Award. ==Overview== Except for the first chapter (set in 1981), the narratives follow a loose chronology. Each chapter is narrated by a different character. These narratives are conversational, as if the narrators were telling a story, often from the first-person perspective. There are, however, five chapters that are told from a limited third-person perspective. The conversational tone of the novel is representative of the storytelling tradition in Native American culture. It draws from Ojibwa myths, story-telling technique, and culture. It also incorporates the Euro-Indian experience, especially through the younger generations, some of whom have been forced by government policy to accept, if not possess, Euro-American culture. ''Love Medicine'' begins with June Morrissey freezing to death on her way home to the reservation. Although she dies at the beginning, the figure of June holds the novel together. Similarly, a love triangle among Lulu, Marie, and Nector is a link among the narratives, even though it is not a persistent theme in the novel. There is also a homecoming (or homing) theme in the novel. The use of multiple themes adds to the storytelling effect of the work. Other themes include: tricksters (in the Native American tradition), abandonment, connection to land, searching for identity and self-knowledge, and survival.
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