Since colonization began in the United States, medical treatment of love has always had problems dealing with indigenous peoples of the land. After the first eradication of the population, the US government changed its policy to consolidation. It is the separation between this white society and Indian culture that has led to the deprivation of the rights reserved by contemporary Indians. In Louise Erdrich's "Love Medicine" for nearly 50 years, people saw the contradictory efforts to isolate Native American for protection and make them them "an" ordinary "Americans".
The concept of "love medicine" has cultural significance, and how does the concept of love come from different packaging? In addition to these cultural images, I can see the meaning of "love medicine" among many different characters of the novel, but I pay attention to the following roles: June and Godi Kasper, and Lernnopsh, Nectar Kashopau (and Mary Lazzar). - I was deeply moved and moved by this sorrowful story about love, devotion, and family expectations. In the small Texas-Mexico border town of the early 1900's, this story is the best example of the story of Mexico. Tita and Pedro are enthusiastic, have eternal, worse, unbearable love. As she was the youngest daughter in her family and she had to take care of her mother until she died, an immortal doctrine never let Tita swear Pedro.
Louise Erdrich's "Love Medicine" is a series of wonderful short stories. One of the main related factors of love medicine is a mixture of religion, naturalistic faith and practice of Ojibwa, a Catholic "missionary" religion that cultivates her prophetic character, they promote a good life I will. Accept life in bondage. Religious themes are closely related to love and identity, and the subject itself is obscured by myriad individuality, contacts and relationships, and work held by modern Indians. This "seeking" identity and religion are reflected most clearly in the two core figures of Kashuba in June and Lipsha Morriskaspa. Religion as a connecting device is also supported by several expanded metaphor (water is the most common)