In The House on Mango Street, it shows how a young girl growing up in a rough neighborhood learns to adapt to the lifestyles of her community. Throughout the vignettes, Esperanza tells her story, she explains the hardships, the good times, and all the struggles she has faced growing up. Sandra Cisneros utilizes Esperanza’s development through the story emphasizing how society affects a child losing its innocence.
The first example from the vignette “The Family of Little Feet”, Esperanza writes about a family with tiny feet the woman passes down her shoes, and with excitement they try them on and walk around, “Do you want this? And gave us a paper bag with one pair of lemon shoes and one red and one pair of dancing shoes that used to be white
As the younger sister, Nenny is often Esperanza’s responsibility, and though her innocence is a major source of annoyance for Esperanza, it also signals Nenny’s independence. In many ways, Nenny is a pesky little sister. Esperanza must introduce Nenny to her new friends and keep her away from bad influences, such as the Vargas kids. Nenny also has qualities that Esperanza covets, including two names “Nenny” is short for “Magdalena”, pretty eyes, and shiny, straight hair. Though Nenny can be a nuisance and a tag-a-long, and her actions often embarrass and annoy Esperanza, she frequently demonstrates her independence.
“Do you like these shoes? But the truth is it is scary to look down at your foot that is no longer yours and see attached a long, long leg.” (Chapter17, Paragraph 7). Dressing up in shoes that are made for adults is both fun and then a bit scary for Esperanza and her friends, as it brings unwanted attention and comments from men and older boys. The shoes that make their feet look unfamiliar to them, since the child leg is in an adult shoe.
She however is very reactive to this situation, she doesn’t tell anybody what happened, she steals late passes, hides in an abandoned janitor closet, and eventually ditches school. That example shows how irresponsible she is. House On Mango Street, by Sandra Cisneros, is about a young girl who moves into a new house with her family in Chicago Illinois in the early 1980’s. Esperanza is not a very happy person, especially after the year she had at the house on Mango Street.
Sandra Cisneros in the novel The House on Mango Street writes about culture, racism, languages, names, poverty, discrimination, friends and family to convey that racism causes insecurities in cultures. Esperanza is a dreamer, independent and occasionally unmindful. Cisneros shows that Esperanza is a dreamer when she describes the house Esperanza imagines what her new house would look like. Because Esperanza said “Our house would be white with trees around it, a great big yard and grass growing without a fence” [Cisneros 4] readers can infer that Esperanza is a dreamer. By using a metaphor, Cisneros shows that Esperanza is independent. When Esperanza, opinionated and insecure, said “Nenny is too young to be my friend…
In both novels, House on Mango Street and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, stereotyping is a reoccurring issue. House on Mango Street shows the stereotypes given to people who have little to no money and Part Time Indian expresses how different races are viewed and treated differently. Esperanza and Junior, the characters in the novels, each struggle with finding acceptance within their own families and with people around them. Sadly, the only reason no one respects them the way they should is based solely on the way they look and where they live. Both novels have a common theme of stereotypes causing society to judge a book by its cover.
In the story, “Esperanza Rising”, a saying means a lot to life. He who falls today may rise tomorrow. When Esperanza’s life goes wrong, she knew that she couldn’t give up. Even though she and her family were suffering from great depression. When Esperanza falls, she thought she couldn’t get back up.
Why does Luis J. Rodriguez want to be governor of California ? The House on Mango Street is about this girl name Esperanza her family moved into the street because they wanted to buy an apartment. The street they moved on was kind of a bad neighborhood or sometimes was a good neighborhood to live on. Luis J. Rodriguez was a former gang member he has faced felony charges and has killed other people and seen other people die in his neighborhood.
“The house on mango street is a novel about struggles of a Mexican American girl by Sandra Cisneros”. Sandra Cisneros was born December 20, 1954 and her first novel was The house on mango street . The novel was first published at 1984 and had an award of the American book award. The main character Esperanza moves to a new house on Mango street and despises it. Esperanza desires to leave her neighborhood because she does not like poor areas where there are racists separated .
. . scuffed and round, and the heels all crooked that look dumb with this dress” (47). Esperanza is so ashamed of the shoes that she doesn’t want to dance. This incident with her shoes connects with her feelings about so many other things in her life like the house she wants. Her parents told her one day they would move “into a house, a real house that would be ours for always . . .
Esperanza, which means hope in Spanish, is the name of the main character in the House on Mango Street. Throughout the first chapter of the story, Esperanza tells the reader about her past experiences in all the houses she and her family has lived in since she was born. Esperanza recalls how each house was different. Alike many children Esperanza’s age, can be very materialistic.
I misplace the spoon inside the fork slot of my mother 's worn down kitchen drawer. In her usual drunken self, she stumbles to walk towards me, dragging her ragged house slippers against the tile floor. I look straight at her with her tangled hair and her blood-shot eyes that tend to cross over because she can not focus on a single damn thing. Her robe is half way on with the band dragging behind it while her half chewed nails of her right arm grip the liquor bottle, her left arm pounds the counter top. She starts screaming, "WHY CAN 'T YOU EVER DO ANYTHING RIGHT."
The House on Mango Street is a touching and timeless tale told in short vignettes. It tells the story of a young Latina girl growing up in Chicago. Her life, and the lives of the people around her, are laid bare to the readers in this touching novella. In the beginning, Esperanza is not accepting of herself. Her family’s poor financial situation, the sadness of the people around her, and the problems she faces in her daily life make her very cynical.
Response Paper to The House On Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros The book The House On Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros is in most ways a typical coming-of-age novel. It deals with the growing up of Esperanza, a young Latina girl. In this novel Cisneros lets the reader take part in the life of a girl not only struggling with poverty and identity, but with everyday problems like friends, school, and boys.
The selected symbol of trees and the quotes related to it are relevant in the entirety of The House on Mango Street since Esperanza repeatedly shows her respect and admiration of trees throughout the book. In “Meme Ortiz”, she mentions how in Meme’s backyard a towering tree is the most memorable sight there. She mentions how the tree has very big branches, the many squirrels living on it, and how it has bloomed even more than the trees in front of her house. Esperanza states how Meme’s tree most likely started as elms and have become this mighty tree, making Esperanza believe she will be like those elms and flourish in her own growth. Furthermore, in “Four Skinny Trees”, she describes four trees in front of her house that are out of place and how they seem they should not be there.
The House on Mango Street is set in a poor, primarily Hispanic neighborhood. Author Sandra Cisneros creates an atypical, yet easily digestible world for the reader to experience while learning about Esperanza’s childhood. The culture of her environment influences Esperanza’s development as she becomes a young woman, and contributes to the book’s driving theme of self-empowerment. Mango Street is the source of Esperanza’s growth through her childhood, and it hides sadness and longing underneath stereotypes of Hispanic people. The characters that live in the broken-down neighborhood all seem to represent pigeonholed views of Latino individuals.