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...ultural bias, and a lack of self-confidence while struggling to find his place in the world. The economic constraints faced by the character help us to understand why he sees himself as an outsider. Jumping trains from California to Wyoming, separated from the normal passengers, he and an acquaintance are forced to spend long hours in a cattle car. The irony is that he comes upon a situation where he finally feels a little happiness. conflict between the narrator and himself is effectively revealed through first person point of view. The native in this short story experiences internal conflict of self-identity. He worries that he is too modern to be native and too native to be modern. The narrator also contemplates whether the whole modern society is right, or his own native society. First person point of view is told through the eyes of a character so that we can read their inner thoughts and feelings. The writing of “Blue Winds Dancing” in this point of view is significant in tha...