So Far From God Character Analysis

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In Ana Castillo’s, So Far From God, the novel focuses on the character Sofi and her four daughters. Castillo narrates the women’s life situations all whilst portraying the negative effects of a male dominant society and the manipulation of women. Sofi is an independent single mother who has completely devoted herself to her daughters. She taught her daughters how to survive without a dominant male in their life, although throughout the novel they come into contact with several men who lead them into severe situations. The unjust deaths of her daughters led her to becoming a leader of her community. The third eldest, Fe, was a victim of an unjust work environment. The youngest, La Loca, was a victim of AIDS. Fe was described as “fine…with a steady job at the bank, and hard-working boyfriend whom she had known forever” (27). After her boyfriend, Tom, left her she had a nervous breakdown. Fe began to work at ACME International by cleaning pans with “some nasty smelling chemical… that Fe was told were parts of high-tech weapons” (180). The women working under these …show more content…

She revived and since then she gave the impression of having phobia or disgust with human beings. The smell of people utterly repulsed her and she “claimed that all humans bore an odor akin to that which she had smelled in the places she had passed through when she was dead” (23). She lives at home, doesn’t let anyone but her mother touch her, and is very fond and connected with animals. The only exception of human contact was the “healing [of] her sisters from the traumas and injustices they were dealt by society” (27). Within the end of the novel Loca began to lose weight got very sick, and was later diagnosed with AIDS. Before her death she played Jesus in a religious procession. Castillo wrote the procession in connection with controversial issues and injustices certain races, genders, and lower class

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