The Potter and the Clay Friends are the raft you need to float when your arms are too tired to swim. They are your rock, your beacon, and your center. Your friends shape not only what you are today but what you will become tomorrow. Friends are the potter, and you are the clay they mold your identity and make you who you are. In the novella The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, a tale about a young girl named Esperanza, who uses vignette style writing to create a story of how friendship shapes the life of a young girl. Friendship is an idea that is expressed greatly throughout the course of this novella. For example in pages 14-16 Esperanza meets two children, Lucy and Rachel, that share similar territory. Both children are faced with the cold hand of poverty day in and day …show more content…
In this chapter recive a bike that they plan to share amongst the three of them. Now this may not seem like much, but to them a bike is more than just a bike. To them a bike is a exit from poverty. To them it is a new beginning. To them is means hope. Cisneros wrote “Rachel, Lucy, me. Our new bicycle. Laughing the crooked ride home”(16). This passage can stan for many thing, but one thing is for sure: For one moment in their lives they were happy. For one moment in their lives they were more than just a bunch of poor kids. For one moment these children's lives they were free. Likewise I see Cisneros’s theme of friendship reflect in my own life as well. Just as Esperanza's friends shape her, my friends do the same. They give my courage and strength. They hold me accountable, and make me be the best I can be. My friends may not be the smartest, or the nicest ,or the most talented but they are true to
Amid a male dominant environment, Esperanza’s influences pressure her in ways not acceptable for a developing girl. Her female role models have been corrupted and controlled by the males in her society. This aspect of her life factors hugely of her developing identity and because of what happens around her, she feels her worth plummeting. She does not want to be like the other females in this story and desires a life not controlled by males, but often Esperanza feels as if she doesn’t a
Esperanza acquires a sense of who she is as a young woman. These characters aid in her decided stance on gender roles and how she wants to evade them as she starts to build her own life. Through Esperanza’s narration, the darkness that correlates with the roles of women is brought into light. The gender roles found in the book are still issues today. Such ideas ruin much of society because people have yet to question and altar them.
Mitchell Curtis English 9 / Period 6 Mr.Boyat 17 October 2016 Three Influential Characters in The House on Mango Street In the novel The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, the story is developed through the eyes of a young girl Esperanza. She learns about the realities of life in a house that she recently moved into. There are many characters that are written as she learns about her new neighborhood. The three most influential characters in the novel are Sally, her Mother ,and Marin.
These problems coming to light through the many women Esperanza looks up to, drive her to rise above her obstacles, and become more than just another poorly treated woman. Despite the variety of girls in the neighborhood, one of Esperanza’s closest friends ends up being Sally, who has moved from one abusive home to the next. Sally’s father was a very strict man and she constantly disobeyed him once out of his sight. Whenever Sally is caught dressing “provocative” or acting “too old” her father decides to teach her a lesson.
Societal expectations are a part of everyone’s life, male or female. From the day people are born, there are roles they are expected to assume-- wife, homemaker, father, provider, mother and many others. While these aren’t necessarily negative, the stigma of not fulfilling these roles can be unpleasant. While the roles we are supposed to choose aren’t always clearly defined, the judgement that comes from choosing to take certain actions in life, like settling down or becoming a mother is palpable. Throughout The House on Mango Street, Esperanza’s view of the world is largely shaped by the people around her, which are her neighbors, family, and friends.
“The desire to belong is in every mind.” ― Debasish Mridha In the novel of mice and men written by John Steinbeck most of the character desire and want to belong and have someone who cares .the main characters George Milton and Lennie small are two migrant workers who in the book are the examples belonging and having someone that 's there for them.once the two meet candy, crooks, and Curley 's wife who don 't desire to belong and for someone.the theme of the novel is that whatever the race, age, gender, etc everyone needs and wants to belong and a friend like some of the workers.
However, Esperanza’s negative view of herself slowly changes as she begins to focus on her larger community and her place within it. Through this, Cisneros shows that knowing and accepting where we have come from is an important part of growing up and determining who we are. In the beginning of
The main protagonist Esperanza, matures from a childish girl to a young confident woman through many critical and life changing events in the story. Ultimately, the author, Sandra Cisneros implements the symbols of confidence, the house on mango street and the metaphor of shoes to show how Esperanza develops into a more mature state. Sandra Cisneros
“In the meantime they’ll just have to move a little farther north from Mango Street, a little farther away every time people like us keep moving in (Cisneros 13).” This quote is a significant part of the story because it shows how Esperanza truly feels about herself and her family. She thinks that because she is poor and lives and a bad neighborhood people move away from her family. Esperanza doesn’t think very much of her or her family at all. She thinks that it is because of their race that people do not want to be near them.
Esperanza is often humiliated not only by where she lives, but also by her physical appearance, hence causing a restriction in her climb to a higher social class. Esperanza is frequently ashamed of her family’s broken-down house in an urban, poor
Obstacles Numerous people stumble upon obstacles, but only a few can overcome them. Most obstacles are influenced by the values of the society. In The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, Liesel Meminger overcomes her lack of education and her different beliefs on Jewish people. In Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet both overcome the obstacle of not being able to be together because of the feud between their families. In “The House on Mango Street” by Sandra Cisneros, Esperanza overcomes the obstacle of not fitting into her society because of her lack of money.
On page 110, during Esperanza’s first conversation with Mrs. Hernandez, the topic quickly turns to their children: - “Tienes hijos?” - “Two.” - “Watch them, mija. The streets are a magnet for trouble.” - “Yeah, but my kids don’t get into trouble.
The Greater Purpose of Home, Community, & Fellowship Home is where the heart is. In Steinbeck’s book, The Grapes of Wrath, the concepts of home, community, and fellowship are changed throughout the novel for the Joads. At first, home is simply the four walls that they live in and the area around it. Community is the neighbors that live surrounding them.
The writer presents Esperanza’s perception of a group of kids who stay at school for lunch rather than going home, as “special kids”. Therefore, Cisneros presents Esperanza as being envious of the other children by revealing her aspiration to be “cool” because the main character
Her first companion, Cathy, is a fleeting friendship in light of the fact that Cathy 's dad soon moves the family away in light of the fact that the area is getting terrible, or as such getting to be more occupied by lower-class Latinos like Esperanza 's gang. Two other young sisters, then again, receive Esperanza into their circle when she chips in cash to help them purchase a bike. Lucy and Rachel help Esperanza contemplate the miracles of growing up by creating rhymes about hips and cat walking around Mango Street in high-heeled shoes. The more experienced children on Mango Street open Esperanza 's eyes to the hardships confronted by minors in unpleasant neighborhoods.