Work cited
Lusterman, Don-David. Infidelity: A Survival Guide. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications, 1998.
The story is written in reverse order. The first part of the story portrays the four Garcia girls as adults, and facing day to day difficulties and dreams that they wish they were different, sometimes. The second half covers their adolescence, and the third section takes the reader back to when the girls were young children exploring the Dominican Republic. The story focuses on the troubles, and struggles of each of the family members; which is all squeezed into five chapters. The reasons of the flash back motive that she used in her story, symbolizes her memories of how she once…
Fiesta 1980, written by Junot Diaz, is about a Hispanic family that lives in New York. Their relatives, tío (uncle) Miguel and tía(aunt) Yrma, just moved from the Dominican Republic to the United states and therefore they are throwing their aunt and uncle a party. There is much representation on how the Hispanic people really live embedded within this short story. Such as the different roles of each family member, the extreme since of loyalty, actions that benefit everyone, and the different ways of showing affection and celebrating.…
into one of the twelve statutory exceptions. This act was popular amongst citizens because it gave them a sense of security, they felt as though they were more protected from unjust activity. Ford’s main focus was battling inflation and unemployment. He had originally planned on increasing taxes and cutting government spending, which would stop inflation from increasing. However, his plans changed, in an attempt to lower the unemployment rates, Ford proposed tax cuts and the limitation of government spending. In acts like the Tax Reduction Act of 1975, Ford cut taxes by nearly 23 billion dollars. Even though the tax cut may have been relieving to the citizens, it led to an economic recession. The government spending, tax cuts, and the unemployment…
Throughout the story Manny deals with an alcoholic father and a borderline obsessive compulsive mother that have both become bitter and resentful. Manny’s brother is rarely home, but when he is he is often drunk. His older sister is resentful that she must carry the family. At one point in the story she gets pregnant and soon loses the baby.…
This gives the reader an example of his theme because a reader would see that Yunior adopted his father’s abusive ways and acts in the his father treated him towards the women he has relationships with in his life. Another way that Diaz shows his novel’s theme of how your family affects the rest of your life and your future decisions can be found in the ‘Ysrael’ chapter when Yunior is searching for Ysrael. This experience is an allusion to how the Jewish people searched for the promised land of Israel for forty years where they were wandering and were without a proper amount of food to live with. This shows the theme because Yunior is searching for love and affection from his family for a very long time before he is given the love he needs and the support he needs, just as Ysrael. The search for love from his family is shown to the audience when Yunior is trying to stop throwing up in his father’s van; Yunior is trying his best to not vomit Papi’s car and he can’t control whether or not he feels sick. His father would constantly abuse him and his mother neglected him for reasons he could never…
In Drown, a collection of short stories, author Junot Diaz presents readers with an impoverished group of characters through harsh, but vivid language. Through the voice of Yunior, the narrator throughout the majority of the stories, Diaz places the blame for Yunior's negativity and rebellious nature on the disappointment caused by his father and the childhood illusion of America. Diaz, through language and symbolism, forces readers into an emotional bond with Yunior while exposing the illusory nature of the American dream. Although intertwined with each story, "Fiesta, 1980" allows for a more concise discussion of Diaz's purpose. <br><br>Diaz's language, even at first glance, appears very different from conventional authors:<br><br>Mami's…
The main characters of the book are Reyna and her older sister Mago and her older brother Carlos. She has two half siblings Betty and Leonardo, but they are not as close to her as Mago and Carlos. When Reyna was two years old, her father named Natalio left their hometown of Iguala in Mexico to find work in El Otro Lado to build his dream house for his family. However, two years later her father told her mother Juana, to come to Los Angeles to help him make money for his dream house. Reyna, Mago, and Carlos were devastated that both parents were leaving them in Mexico to go find work in the United States. The three siblings had to live with their father’s mother Abuela Evila. Their Abuela Evila was in my opinion one of the bad characters of…
Back in then in the 1920’s, everyone except the youngest daughter could get married due to the Mexican traditions that pass from generation to generation. In this novel, Like Water For Chocolate, by Laura Esquivel, Mama Elena, Tita’s mother, and had to choose between running away with the love of her life or staying with the family because the tradition did not let Mexicans and Mulatos, a breed of African American and Mexican get married. Mama Elena is most affected by tradition and her personal desire of love as she must cover up her secret love of Jose Trevino, a Mulatto, to stay respected in her family. The three things that influenced her decisions the most are that she did not get to marry the love of her life; she was forced to marry Juan De la Garza, and that tradition controlled all of the decisions she would later make.…
Mah works at sweatshop sewing for long hours, and then she goes home and prepares some hard meals for her family. Leon Leila’s stepfather is a commercial seaman who ships out for months, he is not very happy with his job even thought when he has too many problems at home his job helps him get away for awhile. As many families Leon and Mah came to this country seeking the American dream, but they had to face many conflicts throughout their lives. There was Ona the middle child who was so attached to Leon but fell in love with a Peruvian boy named Osvavaldo which Leon didn’t approve of, and for this and so many other reasons she committed suicide. Nina the youngest sister lives in New York she likes to explore new surroundings and meet new people she’s like Leon in a way because to avoid her family problems she lives far away. Leila the oldest sister just thinks about her parents and their wellbeing and just resides in Chinatown.…
Antonio Fuentes met Veronica Baker in a way that borders on sounding like a romantic comedy: a tale of spilled coffee and an apologetic lawyer, an overwhelmed grad student accepting her fate- that today would in fact, be one of the not-so-great ones. Antonio took this event, like so many others in his life, as a challenge. Admittedly, making amends with the girl he’d just scalded seemed like a nearly impossible task, but Antonio managed damage control with charm and grace. Rosa often thinks of her parents meeting as a reminder of fate, something to hang on to when she’s not sure she’s doing the right thing.…
The theme of the story Growing Up by Gary Soto is that it is important to treasure and cherish your family experiences, because no matter what you may be doing, families find ways to bond. One example of when this theme was portrayed in the text was when Maria was at her grandmother's house, and she was feeling bad about not accompanying her family on their vacation to Great America, and understands that her family is important, and that she needs to become a bigger part in it. This happens on page 7, where the text states: "She made a list of ways she could be nicer to them: doing the dishes without being asked, watering the lawn, hugging her father after work, and playing with her younger brother, even if it bored her to tears." This shows…
Although the industry did not have a standard on rear-end impacts at the time, engineers at Ford Motors knew the testing for rear-end impact was a standard safety procedure. The car was tested after production, and it failed the test (De George, 2006). At that point one believes there were only two options moving forward. First, install the baffle behind the rear bumper in order to meet the testing requirements or offer customers the option of purchasing the baffle and require the customer to sign a waiver.…
In our opinion, we think that Ford Company is morally wrong if the savings resulting from not improving the Pinto gas tank had been passed on to force’s customers. We will say is morally wrong because Pinto do not meet the safety standard propose by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The safety standard of NHTSA is to reduce fires from traffic collisions. This standard required that all new cars produced by 1972 should be able to withstand a rear-end impact of 20 mph without fuel lost and 30 mph when 1973. The result shows that Pinto had ruptured gas tanks and dangerous leaks.…
They would often fight with each because they were jealous of Papa and his baby brother since they were their father’s favorites. Papa’s sisters, one in particular, Dale would get in trouble and blame it on her the other siblings since she was one of the baby sisters. Even though they fought numerous times, they had good times too. They would go to church every Sunday, played baseball and football, and went hunting and fishing. They mainly did these things because they lived in the backwoods country of Texas and that was what was really out there doing the 1940s and 50s. There was just dirt, trees and the sky something I am glad that I was not born into. In the next state over, as a child, Nanny was not raised by her mother but instead by her grandmother and aunt. They were heavily involved in the church since her grandmother and aunt were the so-called “key holders” of the church meaning, they just unlocked the doors of the church whenever the pastor needed to be there or had service. Nanny’s childhood activities included going to church every Sunday, taking piano lessons, attending Mardi Gras and spending time with her cousin Burnell. He was more like her brother since that was her aunt’s son and was always getting into trouble unlike Nanny who was a “goody…
Neuman, M. Gary. Emotional Infidelity: How to Affair-Proof Your Marriage and 10 Other Secrets to a Great Relationship. New York. Three Rivers Press. 2002. Print.…