Changes In The House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros

1698 Words4 Pages

Growing up is tough, and at times seemingly unbearable on a young soul. Although, the myriad of changes we experience in all different aspects of our lives create and influence who we are today, no matter if they are good or bad changes. In the bildungsroman-novel, The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, readers can relate to the ups and downs of growing up- from the embarrassment of your family and how you look to awkward encounters with peers. The protagonist and narrator, Esperanza Cordero, changes throughout the novel in moral, mature, and artistic ways due to her experiences forming relationships with her neighbors, being assaulted, and observing the power of language as an underprivileged Latina girl growing up in the streets of …show more content…

Initially, Esperanza displayed a healthy and innocent interest in boys and love. For instance, she describes her vision of what having a boyfriend is like: “Everything is holding its breath inside me. Everything is waiting to explode like Christmas. I want to be all new and shiny. I want to sit out bad at night, a boy around my neck and the wind under my skirt,” (p. 73). She innocently imagines a relationship as exciting, breathtaking, and explosive with love and enthusiasm, “like Christmas,” without recognizing or knowing about the downsides of relationships because of her naivete. The main event that changes her perspective so prematurely in her adolescent life is when she was sexually assaulted at a carnival- ironically a place where children are supposed to have fun and act their ages- which is described …show more content…

As she grows older, writes more, and experiences more- specifically witnessing her neighbor Mamacita struggling not knowing the English language- she changes to a mature, observant writer who does not need to be present in the vignette, writing based only on keen observation, and using her passion as an escape mechanism and privacy from her life on Mango Street. Writing was the “home of her own,” where she had all the power in her pen because she could express herself in English, that she saw many people close to her powerlessly struggling with. For example of Esperanza's initial, juvenile writing, she described in quite literal terms her and her family’s different hair: “Everybody in our family has different hair. My Papa’s hair’s like a broom, all up in the air. And me, my hair is lazy and never obeys barrettes or bands... But my mother’s hair, my mother's hair, like little rosettes, like little candy circles all curly and pretty because she pinned it in pin curls all day…" She is evidently present in this vignette because she describes her hair as well, and she writes very much like a child would with indicative words like “lazy,”“candy,” etc. and the fact that she wrote about such a simplistic topic like hair can be seen as very juvenile. This quote also shows how that before being involved with the neighbors on Mango Street, she was only really exposed to her family

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