Comparing Silko's yellow feminine feminist theme with Choplin's 1 hour yellow female story and Kate Choplin's 1 hour story, there are some common feminist themes. The characteristics exhibited by Mrs. Silko and Mr. Mallard contradict their natural role in life. They seem to be limited by marriage. They have no chance of getting married again, so they show liberty and excitement, and do not show misfortune. When Silko was alone in the morning, she had the opportunity to go home, but she did not go.
"Yellow Woman" by Leslie Silko is a true connection between women seeking to be with Native American, Pueblo, culture, heritage. Silco reproduces an amazing story by using images and symbols to describe the inner struggle of a Pueblo woman. It is because this is the only way we can believe in telling a story, as we build it and make us feel as if we are listening to someone else's story.
Leslie Marmon Silko's short story "Yellow Woman" asks the reader to think about the boundary of life, including the boundary between myth and reality. In the story of this young woman who met a strange man named Silva, her identity and the identity of a yellow woman in the ancient Pueblo story became vague. Whether Silva is one of the wonderful ka'tsina spirit, or simply an attractive and exciting person, a young woman wants to find him along the riverbank again.
The famous American novelist Leslie Mamon Silko's short story "Yellow Woman" was first published in 1974, "American Indians Send Rain Clouds: Modern Story". The story of Silko explores the relationship between modern Native American life and the ancient myth that still permeates the North American aboriginal heritage. This poem advises readers to think about the essence of perception of our life and the ambiguous boundary between myth and reality. The historical and spiritual beliefs of Pueblo and Navajo are penetrating the story of a yellow woman. In the narrator's story, both the hero and the reader may feel the power of ancient myths.
Introduction: Leslie Silko is a good example of the concept of a fairy tale (or myth) change and longevity in the story of "a yellow woman". This story is not a contemporary interpretation of the traditional Native American myth, but the style Silko used to express it evokes and changes the verbal communication style of ancient myths I will. This story is also very conscious of its place in that internal place as reference to its place as a contemporary correction of mythology and this aspect of itself. In fact, "yellow women" is a modern version of Native American myths and legends, so it's a perfect example of how old stories are made.