Another example would be when Esperanza first got a job she came across a oriental man on the
Another example would be when Esperanza first got a job she came across a oriental man on the
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…
Esperanza’s rich and loving father was murdered by bandits. Esperanza and what is left of her family are threaten by her dad’s wicked stepbrothers that may have had a hand in his death. In order to get away from their evil grasp they ran to the US of A. Working as plantation workers with their servants. Amidst all this she had to leave behind her grandma due to injuries probably caused by her wicked stepsons. Also like Esperanza Diego de la Vega’s family was taken away from him, his daughter stolen, wife murdered, and sent to a Mexican equivalent of Guantanamo Bay to plot his revenge.…
In class we are reading a book called The House on Mango Street. In the book the main character named Esperanza moves to a very poor neighborhood. Esperanza talks about all the people and what happens to them and herself. In one specific chapter called our good day we are characterizing Esperanza. Some people have said she is insecure others she is ungrateful and whiny. But I Characterize her as a faultfinding person because she persist on finding the faults of everyone and everything.…
Cisneros characterized Esperanza as Dynamic by showing the readers how she cared about her appearance but then she realizes that she doesn't care reminding us that appearance doesn’t matter.The author of “Chanclas” has the character Esperanza describe her appearance in a negative way because she doesn’t like the way her feet look in her old saddle shoes. In the story Esperanza describes herself wearing a new dress, pink and white with stripes, and new underneath cloths and her old saddle shoes. We can infer that she doesn't like her appearance due to her feet because she describes them “big and heavy”.…
Esperanza is uncertain about sitting down at work because she got tired, and had no one to personally ask if she could sit, and could only observe. “… I started sitting down only when the two ladies next to me did.” (pg 54) It’s different for her because, as found in the last question, she’s very pack-minded, and this situation required her to think on her own, which she’s not use to. The man on the night shift betrays her because “…he said we could be friends… I felt better. He had nice eyes and I didn’t feel so nervous anymore.”…
In the novel The House on Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros violence plays a large role in the characters lives. Violence is shown throughout the story through the eyes of Esperanza who is the main character. She has friends and neighbors all who are affected by violence.…
As well as Esperanza, she also likes writing, she enjoys writing. “You just remember to keep writing, Esperanza. You must keep writing. It will keep you free, and I said yes, but at that time I didn’t know what she meant,” (61). As an adult, Esperanza’s aunt, has more experience than Esperanza has. She knows how important it is for a woman to have freedom. Esperanza didn’t understand what she meant when she was young, but she realized that now. She understood keeping writing can make her happier; can make her feels free just because she can write all the things down that she thinks about.…
Rock Central High School, an all white school. She was continuously tormented by teachers and…
When I was a kid, about 5 to 8 years old, my hands would always get cold whenever the surrounding air is chilly. My dad would always tell me to rub them together, like you would in order to make fire. And so I did it. I rubbed and rubbed and rubbed. My fingers grind against each other from the tips of my little fingers to the base of my palm, but none of this worked. My hands still are cold, stone cold. Then my dad said after watching me rub for a whole 3 minutes: You can stop rubbing your hands when they are warm again, as rubbing would make your skin raw. I replied: But they're still cold. Then he told me to hold out my hand and he started rubbing warmth into my hands; his strong, rough hands massaging my palms, my fingers, then suddenly my hands are warm again. After a while, I wondered: will my hands ever become tough and strong like my father's?…
“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…
As a child, Esperanza wants only escape from mango Street. Her dream of independents and "self-definition" also means leaving her family behind without any responsibilities to her family. Throughout the boo, her has also faced some situation where is feels ashamed to be part of the Mango Street community and in some instances refuses to admit she has anything to do with mango street. At the beginning of the book near the earlier chapters, Esperanza feels very insecure about herself in general along with the house that she lives in. As mentioned before she doesn’t want to discuss her name nor where she lives. In the chapter of "The House on Mango Street", "a nun from my school passed by and saw me playing out front. The downstairs dromat had been boarded up because it had been robbed two days before the owner had painted on the wood YES WE' RE OPEN so as not to lose business. Where do you live? She asked. There, I said pointing up to the third floor. You live there? She responded. You live there? The way she said it, made me feel like nothing". This quote reinforces the fact of how apprehensive and shameful Esperanza is during the beginning of the story, where one can clearly see the state of insecurity of Esperanza. This is ultimately contrasted through the progression of the book when Esperanza maturity is shown in the quote," Passing bums will ask, can I come in? I'll offer them the attic, ask them to stay, because I know how it is to be without a house" through this quote you could clearly see the juristic growth from the beginning of the book. Esperanza grows out of her childish and arrogant state to a more confident becomes to feel more empathy towards others, showing her transformation into a confident mature women. Esperanza will even a homeless a place to stay regardless the state or how the house looks like, but she…
She would be so much better off if she kept walking past her abusive household and to a place where “nobody could make [her] sad and nobody would think [she’s] strange because [she] likes to dream and dream”(83). Next, Marin, Esperanza’s neighbor, stands “under the streetlight…waiting for a car to stop, a star to fall, someone to change her life”(27) instead of going out into the world and making changes herself. The way the women of Mango Street live dissatisfies Esperanza. They have either accepted the way their lives played out, knowing that they cannot escape, or simply wait around for a miracle to take them out of their situations. Her own family is no exception. Her mother “could’ve been somebody” with her “velvety opera voice that speaks two languages” but instead, became a housewife after her “shame [kept her] down because [she] didn’t have nice clothes” (91). Her great grandmother, and namesake, was once a “wild horse of a woman” before her husband threw a sack over her head and “carried her off…as if she were a fancy chandelier”(11). Esperanza has inherited her relative’s name, but does not want to inherit her place by the window, where her great grandmother “sat her sadness on an elbow”(11) and looked out, watching her life pass her…
Growing up I experience some bad times that really got me wondering if my life would ever get better because of my current situation; however my life got better and I’m living a great life. In the case of Esperanza and her family they’re living a bad lifestyle and it doesn’t get any better from when they move from house to house or apartment from apartment. Although Esperanza is very intelligent, she’s has yet to figure out that her living conditions aren’t getting better and her dream house won’t getting any better. Despite dreaming big, your reality can really be filled with disappointment.…
Esperanza’s growing maturity demonstrates that identity can be found as one grows up. Esperanza yearns for her own identity when she says, “I want to be like the waves on the sea, like the clouds in the wind, but I’m me. One day I’ll jump out of my skin. I’ll shake the sky like a hundred violins” (Cisnero 60). This shows that Esperanza longs to express herself but is restrained by the way she negatively views her identity. She believes this, knowing that one day she’ll be mature enough to reveal her true self and make her identity impacting. Furthermore, because of Esperanza’s lack of self-esteem, she feels that she isn’t accepted by society because of the way they view her identity. For example, Esperanza relates her identity to trees when…
It is hard to say what affects someone to become something, especially when we are living a high technology life surrounded by things that can inspire us to become someone we want to be. But I believe that we are all influenced by the environment around us, both positively and negatively. Throughout Esperanza's, Junior's, and my life there are things that have affected us to become who we are. One of the key influences for all of us is our surroundings, specifically the environment where we lived. Esperanza has been affected by her surrounding because she didn’t live in a good environment that she can be proud of her, but rather be ashamed and feel uncomfortable.…