Wednesday, October 10, 2007
The House On Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
I have actually had to read this novella before, but honestly, the first time I opened it, read a few pages and shut it. I guess that I just didn't think it was worth my time because It seemed too brief and superficial to be meaningful. For our class, I reread it, and it is actually much better the second time. I tried to think of the story in the context of the "New Mestizo" and the life of Sandra Cisneros. We learned about the experience of Mexican-American women, as they feel that they constantly straddle the border of two cultures and never feel completely excepted into either. She described, in her youth retreating inside of herself and living as an observer of the world around her, more so than a participant. All of this information really added to reading the House on Mango Street. I noticed, more than the last attempt at finishing the book, the lives of the women. it seemed that all of them experienced the same sort of separateness form society. The first time I read the book, I thought that their distance form the outside world was due to the conditions of their surrounding, instead of an issue of identity. Esperanza stays inside and looks out the window
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
I am glad that you appreciated the book a second time around. When you mentioned reading the story in the context of Cisneros’ life, I thought about how her life paralleled that of Esperanza’s. As we had learned, Cisneros was an observer and I too agree that Esperanza was also an observer. Do you think that Esperanza is an extension of Cisneros?
Sorry, my comment above is from me. I just commented under a different name.
Post a Comment