The work she has done is extremely important because it brings upon the idea of how speaking different types of languages can leave an impression on someone. Borders have formed between the types of Spanish spoken with each other as well as in few places across America, displaying the idea that ‘perfect English’ is mandatory for something so simple as requiring to order.…
Out of Holden’s curse word vocabulary, he tends to favor hell. His uses for the word tends to vary. However, his favorite use for the word would be to include it in the second part of a simile. This could mean being either ‘hot as hell’ or ‘cold as hell’. None of these have an a relationship to the definition of hell. Hell is sometimes considered a curse word, which adds more intensity to whatever Holden is…
The scene that my partner and I will be performing is from the play Stop Kiss, written by Diana Son. This play is about two women in New York City who become extremely close, share a public kiss, and are attacked by a man in the park. The character that I will portray is Callie.…
In the excerpt from “How to Tame a Wild Tongue” by Gloria Anzaldua, the author puts her frustrations to paper in the forms of the parallel structure. She uses them to show her personal experience with this abuse towards her culture and through the subtle metaphor of her tongue compared to a wild horse, a symbol of the Native American, and the attempt, but ultimate failure of the “breaking” of both cultures revealing her defiance towards this injustice simulation she faced.…
In this essay, Anzaldua reveals her thoughts about the issues of racism, identity, and low self-esteem faced by Mexican immigrants living in the United States. Anzaldua states that a person’s identity is linked to the way they speak. Anzaldua begins her essay with a metaphor demonstrating how immigrants are suppressed in society. She uses ethos to establish her credibility throughout this essay such as in paragraph 35 (“Until I can take pride in my language…”). Today there are still issues where immigrants are judged by the way they speak and made to feel ashamed of their own language and culture.…
“We want rights, we want rights.” People in america after the war would protest against the government.Such protest is known as shay's rebellion. They were controversial for some people. Although Many people and documents state Shay’s rebellion are reckless rebels, Nevertheless they should be seen and recognized as freedom fighters because, they stood up for others, they aimed to help their country, and kept the gov’t aware of the needs of the country.…
What if everything in your life revolves around brain implants? In the novel, Feed, a girl named Violet experiences a malfunction, which changed her view of society. I can infer that Violet’s encounter with a seizure enabled her to notice how much technology affects her life, how her society differs, and resembles, her memories from when she was six, and comprehend the consequences of having a feed.…
udwig Wittgenstein once said in his book Logico Tractatus Philosophicus ,“The limits of my language means the limits of my world.” This quotation means language has no limit, it’s something that can be translated into a wide variety. Both Amy Tan in the essay, “Mother Tongue” and Richard Rodriguez in the essay, “Aria: Memoir of a Bilingual Childhood” write about their struggle with their identities not only because of their race, but also the language there families speak. Amy Tan and Richard Rodriguez both struggled with there families language conflicting with the need to speak the language of society. While children they share similarities with their struggles, and they differ in their perception of the importance of maintaining their families…
1. Her essay, "How to Tame a Wild Tongue" focuses on the idea of losing an accent or native language to conform to the current environment. Anzaldua grew up in the United States but spoke mostly Spanish. The problem is that the language she spoke was Chicano Spanish, not true Spanish. She was living in an English speaking environment she wasn't living in a Spanish speaking country, but was speaking a form of Spanish. She describes the difficulty of hard the delicate ever changing language of Chicano Spanish.…
Both articles reflect how the language an individual speak is linked with their identity. Anzaldúa and Tan’s article both displayed a strong aid for their claim that many languages one’s speaks has a major impact on the way they interact with the society. They both demonstrate the essence of language, using their own experiences. They both talked about how they grew up surrounded with limited…
In “How to Tame a Wild Tongue”, Gloria Anzaldua shares her feelings of social and cultural difficulties that Mexicans face living in the United States and In “Se Habla Espanol” Tanya Maria Barrientos tells of being Latina who doesn’t speak Spanish.…
Gloria Anzaldua is a Mexican woman who faced troubles growing up because she spoke Chicano and had trouble learning English bdue to her native tongue. She faced quandaries as a child because she had trouble grasping English and spoke with a Hispanic accent. She explains that “At Pan American University, I and all Chicano students were required to take two speech classes. Their purpose: to get rid of our accents.…
This leads many people to feel shame or low self-esteem for speaking this type of Spanish because many people have attacked the Chicano language and brought down those who speak it. Gloria is afraid that by the end of the century, English will be the main dialect of most Chicanos and Latinos. She also feels strongly that if she cannot accept her native tongue then she cannot accept the legitimacy of herself. This includes having the ability to write bilingually and speaking any dialect of Spanish without always having to translate. She believes that she should not have to accommodate to English speakers but that English speakers should accommodate her. To escape the feeling of being inferior, Gloria would often watch Mexican movies or listen to Mexican music. These made her feel a sense of belonging. Likewise, she would surround herself with close family members and bond over delicious homemade food which made her feel as if she was home. Gloria describes being Mexican as a “state of soul”, and that being Mexican has nothing to do with what country someone is from or where one lives. In conclusion, she believes the Chicano people will survive through the hardest times to come. That they have the tools and knowledge to outlive all other races and remain…
Gloria Anzaldua in How to Tame a Wild Tongue and Amy Tan in Mother Tongue both share a similar message in their essays, they argue that every single culture faces different language obstacles when learning the english language. Both struggle to develop the correct form of english, the one considered acceptable by society. Both Tan and Anzaldua teach us about their ethnic backgrounds, in an effort to better help us learn of their struggles. Amy Tan, is of asian descent, and tells us how growing up with a mother who spoke “broken english” influenced the person she became and how she approached the world. Gloria Anzaldua, considered herself a Mexican American but mainly Chicana, and she tells us of her struggle to accept her roots and to find a place where she belonged. Ultimately, this also influenced who Anzaldua came to be. The…
Until I can take pride in my language, I cannot take pride in myself" (81). Language and identity are deeply intertwined according to Anzaldúa; it is a fundamental part of a person's self-actualization and ability to connect to the world. I believe the same idea is present in the queer community. If I did not have a word to explain such a vital part of myself, who would I be? A world without a language of, and for the other, would be a world full of "not" peoples: "not-whites", "not-heterosexuals", "not-Mexicans", and a world where even in language difference was solely negative. Anzaldúa's borderland languages and communities illustrate how a struggle for legitimate identification is better than never having a chosen identity at all. Is this not the foundation of the queer movement since nineteen-sixty-nine? Both communities understand the importance of having a unique language, understand that difference can be both an individual and group experience, and understand the beauty of being "boundless" and borderless, in a world that does not even see the borders they have drawn around…