In chapter twenty-three of The Surrounded, Modeste speaks to the absence of moral justice that
occurs once old Indian laws are replaced. He says, “…since that time we have
not used the whip. Yes, I think it is bad. In the old days it was a good thing
because it kept the people straight…Well, they gave us new laws and now nobody
is straight” (207). White laws smother the people’s urge to confess, thus
making them act in sneakier and secretive ways in order to avoid white imposed
punishment and justice. The tension between old traditional justice forms and
new justice forms is palpable in this section as Modeste contrasts the past
willingness to confess and accept punishment with the present neglect to adhere
to the law.
This tension is further developed when Catherine speaks of
why she wishes to be punished with the whip. “I prayed for [my sons] and tried
to keep them from going to hell,” she says. “It would have been better if they
had been given the whip” (210). In this section the failure of justice sparks
disillusionment within Catherine towards other areas of belief: specifically
religion. Catherine’s abandonment of the Christian priets’ teachings mirrors
Archilde’s own feelings of religious dissention.
Overall there is an ever-building tension between the traditional
Indian way of life and the ever-imposing white culture. Portrayed through the
contrasts in the ways justice was and is administered, as well as attitudes
towards those justice types, old Indian beliefs are shown to be increasingly
smothered by white culture. McNickle therefore develops the idea of a
surrounded West: one that is being strangled by the suppression of old cultures
and traditions. The only way in which to escape the sense of surroundedness is
to embrace one’s Indian side, just as Catherine does.
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