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    In analyzing Cristina Garcia’s Dreaming in Cuban‚ it was apparent that the ideas and assertions presented in Thomas C. Foster’s chapter “It’s Never Just Heart Disease...And Rarely Just Illness” are relevant in this novel. In applying the assertions from Foster’s chapter‚ one can conclude each character’s “mental illness” reflects their views on identity in addition to allowing the author to expose their true identity and character. In his chapter‚ Thomas C. Foster presents assertions that disease

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    Music has‚ in many ways‚ the ability to transport one to a different reality. Throughout Dreaming in Cuban‚ music serves as a tool that blurs the boundaries that exist geographically and spatially between the characters. Garcia utilizes unique devices in her narrative to connect the women despite their generational differences. In 1955‚ Celia writes

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    Dreaming in Cuban: The Rebel Pilar Puente spends the entire novel searching for some sort of identity in the patriarchal male society. She challenges this society through her art‚ which she thinks is the best way to communicate her ideas. Communicating through this seemingly different language allows her to cope with her struggle to connect to one of two worlds‚ Cuba and America. Pilar is caught by the punk rock scene which indicates she has a rebellious‚ independent‚ and anti-government mindset

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    determine its own identity. Some Cubans have fought with the decision to stay in their native country or migrate to the United States. Others have decided to settle in Cuba and let their fate be determined by the gods. Santería‚ an African religion mixed with Catholic traditions‚ is practiced by many Cubans and allows followers to establish their destiny by the orishas‚ or African spirits. It also gives a sense of individuality to the characters in the novel‚ Dreaming in Cuban which incorporates several

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    Littler English 190 8 June 2012 Section 1 2. Compare what Cuba means for Pilar in the beginning of Dreaming in Cuban with what it comes to represent by the novels end. Things that come to be expected can often be taken for granted. People who grow up in the United States come to expect certain freedoms because they have never been without those freedoms. Pilar in Dreaming in Cuban by Christina Garcia is no different. She was born in Cuba and was brought to United States when she was two

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    Dreaming In Cuban Summary

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    towards Cuba. In the article “Cuba as Text and Context in Cristina Garcia’s “Dreaming in Cuban” by Mary S. Vasquez‚ the article highlights Cuba and‚ the view that Pilar‚ Lourdes and Celia have of it. In Mary S. Vasquez article her main interest is Cuba‚ and how it has the shape the lives of the whole family but specially Celia‚ Lourdes and Pilar. Through the article ““Cuba as Text and Context in Cristina Garcia’s “Dreaming in Cuban” by Mary S. Vasquez you can see how Cuba impacts Lourdes‚ Celia and

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    Most people look at their past and don’t regret anything because of where they are now. People also question their ancestral roots because they make most of our attributes. In‚ Dreaming in Cuban‚ by Cristina Garcia characters are missing something to make them happy. They don’t know what makes them truly happy or what they can do to get there. They get lost when things get hard and can’t really connect with others for some reason. They can’t seem to relate to places or things. They also cant control

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    Cristina Garcia’s Dreaming in Cuban tells the story about three generations of a Cuban family and their different views provoked by the Cuban revolution. Though part of the same family‚ an outsider might classify them as adversaries judging by relationships between one another‚ the exiled family members‚ and the differentiations between political views. Although all of these central themes reoccur over and over throughout the narrative‚ family relationships lie at the heart of the tale. The relationships

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    Dreaming When’s the last time you dreamed? In fact‚ the last time sleep occurred is the correct answer. Most people believe that they don’t dream‚ only because these individuals can’t recall dreaming as an event. In J. Allan Hobson’s book‚ Dreaming‚ it explores how dreaming is influenced and how it affects the individual‚ how dreaming is associated with REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep and the importance of it‚ and also why sleep is so essential for human beings and other mammals to experience. Sleep

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    meaning of the Dreaming is central to Aboriginal spirituality. Each Aboriginal group is connected with the Dreaming and is aware its unique identity is derived from it. Aboriginals today‚ continue to emerge from the Dreaming‚ yet they are still intensely connected with it till this day. The Dreaming includes all aspects of Aboriginal life‚ and because of the vast scale it encompasses‚ it is a challenging task to link it entirely to a specific typology in the study of religion. The ‘Dreaming’‚ is an English

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