Friday, May 31, 2019

The House on Mango Street :: House Mango Street

The House on mango tree thoroughfare     At the novels end, Esperanza declares that she is too strong for Mango Street to keep her forever. What is the nature of her aptitude? How does Cisneros establish this characteristic elsewhere in the book?   Esperanza feels she is too strong to live on Mango Street. She feels her life would be better if she lived somewhere else. She wants to leave Mango Street so that she can find herself. Esperanza knows that she is not like the others on Mango Street, and she wants to move to a name with trees around it, a big yard and grass growing without a fence (page 4). To leave, she must obtain strength. Where will she get it? I believe her strength comes from within.   Esperanza builds her strength off the mishaps that occur while living on Mango Street. In the vignettes, Esperanza describes some very interesting things that take place on Mango Street. She recalls a time when Sally befriended her and told Esperanza to leave her alone with the boys. Esperanza felt out of place and was very uncomfortable and very ashamed to be in that situation. She valued more from life than that, so she left the scene.   There was another time when Esperanza wanted to extinguish lunch in the canteen at school. She was not allowed to eat at school, because she lived close enough to walk home for lunch. But, Esperanza wanted to feel special like the other kids, so she convinced her mother to write a note to the nun in charge giving her permission to eat in the school canteen. The mother wrote the note, but the nun was not convinced. So, she made Esperanza go to the window and point to her house. She was too ashamed to point to the old-run-down home where she lived. This was one of her most embarrassing moments. Not to be outdone, Esperanza said, I knew then I had to have a house. A real house. One I could point to (page5).   In Four Skinny Trees, Esperanza compares herself to the four skinny trees outside her house. Like the trees, she too, has not ensnare her place in the world.

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