Fleur Pillager

E587991

Fleur Pillager is a powerful and enigmatic Ojibwe woman in Louise Erdrich’s novel "Tracks," known for her deep connection to the land and resistance to colonial encroachment.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Fleur Pillager canonical 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Ojibwe woman
fictional character
literary character
protagonist
appearsIn Tracks NERFINISHED
appearsInSeries Love Medicine series NERFINISHED
associatedWith Pillager clan NERFINISHED
associatedWithPlace Matchimanito Lake NERFINISHED
North Dakota reservation NERFINISHED
centralThemeIn Tracks NERFINISHED
createdBy Louise Erdrich NERFINISHED
culture Ojibwe culture
ethnicity Ojibwe NERFINISHED
familyName Pillager NERFINISHED
firstAppearanceIn Tracks NERFINISHED
firstAppearanceYear 1988
gender female
hasChild Lulu Nanapush NERFINISHED
hasRelative Eli Kashpaw NERFINISHED
Nanapush NERFINISHED
hasReputation dangerous woman
sorceress
hasTrait defiant
enigmatic
independent
powerful
resilient
spiritually gifted
languageCommunity Ojibwe-speaking community
literaryPeriod contemporary American literature
literaryRole challenge to patriarchal norms
embodiment of Indigenous sovereignty
narratedBy Nanapush NERFINISHED
Pauline Puyat NERFINISHED
nationality Native American
notableFor association with supernatural events
deep connection to the land
resistance to colonial encroachment
occupation farmer
landowner
religiousOrSpiritualBelief Ojibwe spiritual traditions
resists assimilation policies
land dispossession
symbolizes Indigenous resistance
connection between people and land
survival of Ojibwe culture

Referenced by (1)

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

Tracks character Fleur Pillager