Love Medicine Theme of Abuse

Alcohol abuse isn't the only kind of abuse going on in the Love Medicine—there's plenty of psychological and physical abuse as well. This happens within families, with characters often carrying on long-standing psychological warfare, and others being outright violent and abusive to their partners.

As with alcoholism, it seems like these forms of abuse are stem from the characters' deep-seated unhappiness with their lives overall. Whatever the cause, the overwhelming number of examples of crummy behavior between the characters is pretty upsetting and creates a mood of overall violence and depression.

Questions About Abuse

  1. What are the origins of the characters' abusive behaviors, do you think? Are these just (unfortunately) examples of the kinds of typical dramas that some families get wrapped up in, or something else?
  2. Is there any hope for the characters to get out of the cycles of abuse that they're wrapped up in? If so, where do you find that hope?
  3. What do you make of the narrators' stance toward the violence and abuse they portray? Are they critical? Indifferent? Numb? Why does it matter?

Chew on This

Try on an opinion or two, start a debate, or play the devil’s advocate.

The narrators' kind of bland, impassive stance toward the abuses portrayed really drives home the bleakness of the characters' circumstances—this kind of stuff is so "normal" that the narrators can't even be bothered to get worked up about it.

Erdrich suggests that the cycles of violence continue seamlessly from generation to generation, with no progress or change, which suggests the overall crumminess of the characters' circumstances.