Besides having to leave two siblings, grandparents, and friends behind, the family shared a single room, and the children slept on the floor. Similarly, the language barrier was a huge impediment for Diana in her institution, where she studied Biochemistry. Diana had the Hispanic friends who could not professionally help with her with English homework, and the native students socially excluded her. Evidently, Anzaldua introduces “borderlands” as the physical presence of two or more cultures, races, or social classes coexisting in the same dimension (249). Importantly, her book explains that racial discernment is a major problem in America, and achieving racial equality is her minorities’ mutual objective. Therefore, Anzaldua refers to herself as “a border woman” since she was educated by two cultures like Diana. As such, both women fight for refugee freedom in …show more content…
In particular, she explains her family’s inability to interact freely with individuals in Mexico due to their cultural transformation. The religion significantly helps Diana’s family conserve their customs and cope with the new culture by building new associations and assimilating into the American culture. Anzaldua renders hatred, exploitations, and anger as borderland features. Also, she emphasizes that the riposte to the challenges between natives and non-natives lies in culminating the differences in their languages, cultures, backgrounds, and thoughts. Takaki also asserts that without the principle of unity, the cultural multiplicity will tear America’s social fabrics (3). That is why despite the ideological variety, the representatives of distinct cultures in the U.S. are likely to face