Throughout the essay “Joyas Volardoras”, Brian Doyle describes the heart of different animals and gives details of how those animals live their life according to their necessities. As we can see in the first 3 paragraphs, the author introduces the hummingbirds to us with many facts and descriptions. Doyle begins this essay by saying: “Consider the hummingbird for a long time”, and then he starts to narrate how fast a hummingbird's heart beats and how strong but fragile they can be. As you keep reading, you will find out that, Doyle is not talking about hummingbirds anymore. Now he is comparing a hummingbird to a tortoise. He says:…
Bernal Diaz de Castillo wrote about a quest that he was fortunate enough to participate with his soldier leader, Hernan Cortes. Hernan Cortes and his soldiers went on many different expeditions in order to expand their knowledge on the unknown world. Bernal Diaz de Castillo did not hold any type of leadership within his community; however, he was intelligent enough to know a new world apart from an old one. The New Spain that Castillo and his conquest mates experienced eventually led to the publication of his memoirs and witnessing experience.…
Juan Castillo Morales also was known as Juan Soldado or Juan the soldier is a twenty-four-year-old, Mexican soldier who was executed and convicted of the murder and rape of Olga Camacho who is an eight-year-old girl that went to the supermarket to buy meat but never returned. Paul J. Vanderwood discusses Juan Soldado in very vivid detail in his book Juan Soldado: Rapist, Murderer, Martyr, Saint. Vanderwood title is very contradicting because is there any possible way to be described as a saint and a rapist? Or a murder and martyr? In his book, he goes into vivid detail about the 1938 rape case and how many believe that he had been wrongly accused. After Juan Soldado execution many begin to doubt his guilt and the evidence that the Mexican…
Josie Mendez-Negrete’s novel, Las Hijas de Juan: Daughters Betrayed, is a very disturbing tale about brutal domestic abuse and incest. Negrete’s novel is an autobiography regarding experiences of incest in a working-class Mexican American family. It is Josie Mendez-Negrete’s story of how she, her siblings, and her mother survived years of violence and sexual abuse at the hands of her father. “Las Hijas de Juan" is told chronologically, from the time Mendez-Negrete was a child until she was a young adult trying, along with the rest of her family, to come to terms with her father 's brutal legacy. It is a upsetting story of abuse and shame compounded by cultural and linguistic isolation and a system of patriarchy that devalues the experiences of women and girls. At the same time, "Las Hijas de Juan" is an inspirational tale, filled with strong women and hard-won solace found in traditional Mexican cooking, songs, and storytelling.…
Jose is a type of person that anyone could look up to. He’s strong, smart and doesn’t let people walk all over him. Throughout the movie he becomes a stronger and stronger person. He goes through two deaths of two people who are very influential in his life, let alone the death of his mother. His grandmother, Ma Tine, raises him. She is a very influential person as well, because she has only the best in mind for her grandson. Although Sugar Cane Alley takes place in Martinique, well after slavery was abolished, the way Jose and Ma Tine live reflect many of the same ideologies of slavery from many years before. In Martinique almost everyone works, they cut sugar cane which is barely enough money to live off of. The only way to advance and make something of your self is to do well in school. This is exactly what Jose does; he studies hard and takes an exam granting him permission to attend a school in Fort-de-France. Unfortunately, Jose is only accepted a partial scholarship, forcing Ma Tine to be a laundress so Jose can go to school. I was very surprised as to what a hard worker Jose was. He’s a brilliant kid and many people around him know it. The effort he put in to his schoolwork says a lot about who he is and how he was raised. He sets a great example for his plantation.…
After becoming utterly brainwashed Juan ends up taking his own life because he has become too far into the system that he censors his own letter without thinking. In “The Censors” written by Luisa Valenzuela, Juan sends a letter that might cause harm to a friend, so he takes a job and his goal is to move up so he can send it. He goes from moving up in the job to send his own letter to becoming too focused and brainwashed by the government and the job and doing it well to get a raise that he ends up creating his own tragic end because he became to indoctrinated in his work .…
In the introduction of this chapter, we learn that on November 28th, 1595 Gaspar de Peralta, a judge for the Royal Audiencia of Charcas, answered a call from his next-door neighbor’s house. Once he entered the house, he found a domestic horror scene. Having entered the bedroom, Peralta found his chief scribe and the secretary of the audiencia (Fernando de Medina) standing over the bloody bodies of his wife and her lover, Beatriz Gonzalez. Fernando de Medina (the Husband) immediately confessed to murdering his wife and her love. He proceeded to tell the judge of his wife’s long- term affair with Beatriz Gonzalez. Fernando de Medina believed that it was his right to defend his honor. One of the first documents was a statement from Medina, saying that in no point in time in the twenty-seven years or so of marriage had he given his wife a reason to be unfaithful. In the document he explained that over the twenty-seven years he had moved from place to place and he always provided his wife with everything she’d ever needed. She provided him with two children and they all were all well taken care of. The last and final move though was she meets her “new suitor” in the garden. He goes on to say that Gonzalez and his wife would use any opportunity and location to be together. They used his (the husband) home, or the lovers, she would either wear her own clothes or try to hide their relationship and wear men’s clothing. In this passage the husband feels he has to defend his honor because he found out that all of his servants were aware of this affair.…
The word “silence” is constantly repeated throughout the play. In fact, the very last word that comes out of Bernarda’s mouth is “silence.” What do you think this word can symbolize?…
Juanito is my name, it's been a lot of days without seen the sun, iwork alot.My mother is dead and my father said that he is to old and can't visit me.My my time goes by, thinking of my family and the people that stayed in the desert and i think that i could have been one of them.…
First of all, Juana is a quite person who takes care of her family, she is a mother. Kino is a father, a good guy who works hard ad a happy person. His job is a pearl diver, when Kino found the pearl Kino changed. Juana is good wife who obeys her husband. She is also independent person and is a wise women. Kino is protective about his family and Juana is respectful, patient person. On page 7 it says “She, who was obedient and…
The story is told in first person person because it was being told by the point of view of the protagonist…
As an economics major the great depression has always been an interesting subject. Upon studying more about it I have learned that the effects of the great depression were felt around the world. The Argentine government was in turmoil because of it. During this ugly time in Argentina’s history the painter Antonio Berni was able to fight for social justice. His painting “Manifestacion” shows the struggle of the common Argentine of the day.…
his own poetical version of Don Juan. Don Juan is a man who is known for being…
Life is not perfect; it certainly has its ups and downs. Some people accept life as it is: they face reality, solving life’s problems and appreciating its benefits. Others choose to lean toward the fantastic, imagining fictional ideals and utopian lifestyles. A story that embodies this dialectic is that of Don Quixote, written by Miguel de Cervantes, where the main character, a simple middle aged gentleman, becomes influenced by books he's read on the topic of chivalry. The experience drive Don Quixote mad, and he imagines himself a world like the one in his chivalry books.…
Clad in a simple blue shirt and a pair of dirty white shorts, Wally Bayola does not look like the highly acclaimed comedian who once had his career beaten to a pulp due to a sex controversy.…