This book is about a girl named esperanza and her journey from being a wealthy person living in mexico. To then moving to california and being a migrant worker. this book shows the struggle of what happens to her during this journey. Esperanza was living in el Rancho de las Rosas. When the day before her 13th birthday her papa was killed.…
Connecting the snoring, the rain and Mama’s hair is to give the scene a calming and cozy atmosphere. This section of “Hair” compares all the safe and comforting things in Esperanza’s life to convey that when she experiences them it makes her feel secure. This is similar to a security blanket that children have as a baby, they hold them to feel safe when their parents are not close or all the time. Esperanza expressing that her mother’s hair comforts her, shows how close she is to her mother because just looking at her hair makes her feel safe. However, this was not the case for many children in Esperanza’s position, numerous parents would have financial and marriage problems at the least and when the stress would build up, they would take it out on their children. Many children needed something like Esperanza’s mother’s hair so that they would feel safe without looking for another more harmful way to distract themselves from the pressure of their daily lives. Furthermore, Esperanza was extremely fortunate because her parents loved her and was for the most part safe at home. The effect of linking Esperanza’s father’s snoring, the rain and her mama’s hair on the audience was to create a soothing ambience and take a break working about growing up and the dangers in that process. This chapter was the most serene chapter so far in the book because she is talking about peaceful things in her life. On the contrary, the other chapters (so far) have been discussing growing up and the pressures of developing into a woman/adult. The author wanted to discuss these pleasures to take a break from her troubles so that the story would not become dark. In conclusion, the author wrote the book like how Esperanza lived and thought, she was constantly reminded of the troubles of maturing, but had reminders, like her mother’s hair, that would ease her stress and remind her it was…
What would it feel like to have all your valuables and loved ones taken away from you? This sad feeling is what Esperanza felt. In the book Esperanza Rising By Pam Munoz Ryan, Esperanza thought she would live a wonderful life on her family’s ranch in Mexico. But then an unforeseen disaster shatters her world and forces Esperanza to flee to California and become a worker to survive In several ways Esperanza’s life is like the roots, stem, and thorns of a rose.…
Esperanza is the main character in the book “The House on Mango Street”. She started off as a naive girl that doesn’t know anything about the real world she lives in. As time passes she learns more about herself and the world around her. Another major character in this book is Sally. Sally was born into a harsh family where her father will beats her. Sally was always trapped by her father until one day she marries a man that treats her just like her father but, she doesn’t notices.…
In the first section the author tells how she became a dancer. In the first paragraph her grandmother tells her stories about their ancestry, and that’s why she has so much pride in herself. Maria was shy but ballet broke her out of her shell. The section shows you as she gets older she starts gain confidence in herself when she starts performing.…
Her perception is absolutely crushed after the experience at the carnival and is forced to regress back into a vulnerable and powerless child again. In Cisneros' Monkey Garden, Esperanza tries to protect Sally but is emotionally humiliated. In Red Clowns however, it is Esperanza who needs Sally to save her and winds up sexually humiliated. The lack of personal responsibility between women that Esperanza perceives in her world leaves her feeling alienated and deeply confused. Once again, the narrator suffers a crisis of identity and must reevaluate her role as a writer and growing young woman. It is not until after her assault at the carnival does Esperanza drop the notion of being a "beautiful and cruel" woman to eventually accept her identification as a budding…
As the result, Esperanza wrote about her whole life and this novel is like the diary. This book is very interesting and important because Esperanza is like keeping her diary and wrote about her life. These paragraphs written about Esperanza’s ages from she was young to older and whole life. I would guess that her novel is furtive for her…
This quote expresses what Esperanza is feeling right then she is incontestably sad. In addition, she wants a boy around her neck and the wind under her skirt. But instead, she's verbalizing to the trees next to her window. Moreover, Esperanza wants to be somebody she's not being everybody is different and it's fascinating. She wants to be "new and shiny" in other words I assume she wants boys to chase her and she wants to be popular. Finally, she is struggling to be someone she wants to be but…
Esperanza does not want to become like the rest of the women on Mango Street. She notices the male dominant society and does not want her freedom taken away. Esperanza doesn't want to have to marry and conform to everything he wishes. She loves and admires her great-grandmother, who was an independent free-spirited woman. When…
Alicia is Esperanza’s friend. She likes writing. She always studies all the night otherwise she would have a life like her mother. She wants happiness, her own life and to do the things whatever she wants. “Alicia, who inherited her mama’s rolling pin and sleepiness, is young and smart and studies for the first time at the university. Two trains and a bus, because she doesn’t want to spend her whole life in a factory or behind a rolling pin,”(31-32). Alicia is very young; she still has a chance to achieve her dreams. She knows if she wants stay away the life like her mother’s which is doing boring works in the factory, she needs to keep studying and writing. She believes that keeping writing can make a big change on her life. she can get a better life and a life with more freedom.…
“Red Clowns” begins with Esperanza going to a carnival with Sally, her friend who often wants to be independent and does not want others’ attention. She also dislikes other people depending on her. Soon Sally disappears with a boy, while Esperanza patiently waits by the red clowns. Once alone, Esperanza felt extremely vulnerable and boys by the red clowns statues attack her. One boy forced her to kiss him as he yelled out “I love you, Spanish girl”. Esperanza clearly did not want them to attack her like they did. Cinceros states, "I couldn't make them go away. I couldn't do anything but cry. I don't remember. Please don't make me tell it all" (p.100). Esperanza blames Sally and other women in her life for not telling her about the hard parts about growing up. She is upset about what happened with the men and how they took advantage of her. As Esperanza is taken away by the clowns her innocence of childhood gone. She begins to really grow and understand how following the wrong people like Sally, can be very dangerous. We realize this by noticing Sally’s lifestyle and how it affects the way she acts around other people. Throughout the chapter, repetition is an important literary device. Cisneros uses the words liar, lied, and lie to show how Esperanza repeatedly was rethinking her past and future. She was hoping, what books and magazines tell her about growing…
Changed into someone who grew from her mistakes, learned from her experiences, and changed from influences around her. When Esperanza goes to a carnival with one of her friends, Sally, Esperanza encounters a very uncomfortable situation for her. “Sally, you lied. It wasn’t what you said at all. What he did. Where he touched me. I didn’t want it, Sally. The way they said it, the way it’s supposed to be, all the storybooks and movies, why did you lie to me” (Cisneros 72)? If this situation never had happened, Esperanza wouldn’t grow and learn from this. She grows more aware of who she is as a woman. She obviously does not like the situation she is put in so she will understand what happened to her, use that and put that towards her future. Next, Esperanza used all of her stories and realized who she is as a woman. Who she wants to be, what she wants her life to be. Not anybody telling her how to live it. “Not a flat. Not an apartment in back. Not a man’s house. Not a daddy’s. A house all my own. With my porch and my pillow, my pretty purple petunias. My books and my stories. My two shoes waiting beside the bed. Nobody to shake a stick at. Nobody’s garbage to pick up after” (Cisneros 78). Esperanza doesn’t want somebody telling her what to do everyday, or cleaning up after someone besides herself, or a man’s house. Her own…
“Homage to my Hips” sent goosebumps up every inch of my feminist self. It is not just a proclamation of body positivity, but also a declaration of the freedom women have over their bodies. Lucille Clifton makes a point to emphasize that the only person who can control her hips and their actions is herself. Throughout history, women have been continuously shamed for being “promiscuous” when their actions are no different than any grown man’s. This poem embraces big hips while also sending a message to women to embrace their sexuality, whether they are dubbed a “prude” or “promiscuous”.…
In the vignette “What Sally Said,” the reader can infer that sally is getting beaten by her father, and she is lying about it at school to protect him because she really loves him in spite of his abusive behavior. On page 92, it states, “He never hits me hard, she says her mama rubs lard on all the places where it hurts. Then at school She’d say she fell.” This reveals that Sally minimizes the severity of her father’s abuse by downplaying to the situation to Esperanza. In addition to downplaying the abuse to Esperanza, Sally completely lies about the abuse at school. For instance, on page 92, it says,” But Sally doesn’t tell about that time he hit her with his hands just like a dog, she said, like if I was an animal.” It clearly states…
The flowers, “rosa y azucena” are metaphors that reflect her facial expression and appearance, for example, the pink colour from the rose reflects the sign of vivacity in the lady. It could also be interpreted that the rose is a sign of her hidden passion for him. The white lily is a reflection of her honesty, purity and innocence. Here, Garcilaso is comparing the lady to a flower, soft, gentle and delicate. The adjectives “ardiente, honesto” are used to describe her gaze which gives us a further insight as to what this woman is like. If she has a burning gaze, then it is without a doubt that she has passion, but she is also honest which is again, a depiction of her calmness…