Gray Beaver

E484870

Gray Beaver is a Native American man in Jack London’s novel "White Fang," known for owning and harshly training the wolf-dog protagonist.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Gray Beaver canonical 1

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Native American
fictional character
human
literary character
appearsAlongside Beauty Smith NERFINISHED
Kiche NERFINISHED
Mit-sah NERFINISHED
White Fang NERFINISHED
appearsIn White Fang NERFINISHED
appearsInMedium novel
associatedWith Mackenzie River Indian camp NERFINISHED
characterTrait emotionally detached toward animals
pragmatic
stern
createdBy Jack London NERFINISHED
culturalContext Yukon Gold Rush era NERFINISHED
ethnicity Native American
familyRelation father of Mit-sah
firstAppearsInChapterOf White Fang, Part II NERFINISHED
gender male
hasChild Mit-sah NERFINISHED
languageContext speaks an Indigenous language interpreted in English narration
literaryPeriod American literature of the early 20th century
narrativeFunction represents Indigenous human mastery over nature
shapes White Fang’s early domestication
nationality Canadian Indigenous
occupation tribesman
owns Kiche NERFINISHED
White Fang NERFINISHED
pet Kiche NERFINISHED
White Fang NERFINISHED
publicationContext White Fang (1906 novel) NERFINISHED
relationship master of White Fang
residence Mackenzie River region
roleInWork owner of White Fang
trainer of White Fang
sells White Fang to Beauty Smith NERFINISHED
setIn Canadian Northland NERFINISHED
Yukon Territory NERFINISHED
socialRole head of family
species human
trains White Fang as a sled dog
treats White Fang harshly
uses harsh discipline
whip to train White Fang

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

White Fang hasCharacter Gray Beaver