Ecology is defined as the interrelationship between humans and non-human beings. Ecology meets the whole scale of life. The theme of ecology is very common in American literature. This is the case of the memoirs "Black Elk Speaks" written in 1932. "Black Elk Speaks" is the story of relatives of the Sooke tribe and Crazy Horse called Black Elk. Black Elk is a witness to the fight of Little Big Horn in 1876. In the whole memoirs, the black moose tells the fear he witnessed when he fought carelessly.
The scenes of the spiritual world and the spiritual world are the themes which appear repeatedly in Black Healtha's speech. Black elk had some vision in his life, but for the first time - at the age of 9 - was the most important. He believes that this vision includes the key to helping his people save from Waschuchus. In this sense, his vision represents his desire to provide a better life and future to the Siou 's compatriots. After all, Black Elk thought that he could not use his vision to help his people.
But black moose speaks more than the magnificent history of a brave indigenous country. It is a spiritual classic, due to John Nehat's sensitivity to the magnificent Earth of Black Stag, her creature, and humanity as a whole. Black Elk Speaks is a reading once in a lifetime. An emotional story of a young boy in Lakota before the booking period, an unforgettable history of the American Indian country, and a permanent spiritual message to all of us. "If there is a great religious classic in this century or this continent, it must be judged as a member of Black Elk Speaks ... his book has become the North American Bible for all tribes It ... ... It tells us about simple and convincing words about human experiences and encourages us to emphasize the highest we live ... "- Vine Deloria Jr
John G. Neihardt's "Black Elk Speaks" is one of the most unusual memoirs ever. Black moose, Oglouras medical researcher, his life is related to books, he does not speak English. The medieval Indian culture, the poet and authority of John G. Neighhart brought a black moose story on this page without saying Sue. However, the two men recognized each other as a spirit of comrades, and everyone changed the book into reality. Neihardt first met the black moose in the 1890s and studied ghost dance. Nehart wanted to gather information directly for his poem when he heard that black moose was once a tool participant in Oglala Ghost Dance Movement. However, after first meeting this aging medical scientist, Neihardt believes that the story of Black Elk itself is an important part of American history and needs to be preserved.