The House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros Struggle For Independence?

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Throughout the year we read twelve powerful pieces of literature. However the one that should be retained is The House on Mango Street, by Sandra Cisneros. The House on Mango Street, follows a young Latina girl, Esperanza, as she grows up and learns how to be independent. The story describes women of different ages living on Mango Street and how they are all trapped as they rely on men, believe in the impossible, or wish for lives that they don’t have. Esperanza’s desire for independence causes her to want to leave, but she realizes that she must come back so she can help the other women become stronger. The House on Mango Street teaches crucial life lessons such as the dangers of cultural stereotyping and the importance of standing up for …show more content…

In the neighborhood all of the women become trapped as their desires and their need to rely on others keep them in Mango Street. The lack of independence that the women have show the power that men have over them in society. The system becomes pitiful as the women rely on men for all that they need. Independence is forgotten as the reliance on others becomes stronger. Rafaela's husband refuses to let Rafaela outside of the house as he is scared that she will run away. She is not only trapped literally but she is also figuratively trapped in her home. Instead of pushing back against her barrier for freedom, she dreams and hopes about a life that she cannot have. Rafaela drinks coconut and papaya juice an wishes for a better life, but doesn’t take action as all she does is dream. Esperanza implies that even if Rafaela does escape, her reliance on men will only take her to another oppressive man “And always there is someone offering sweeter drinks, someone promising to keep them on a silver string”(80). There will always be someone that offers something sweeter and gives promises, and Rafaela will never stop dreaming about the life that she doesn’t have and she will never be satisfied as her dreams will never be fully fulfilled. Esperanza then starts to understand about the trapped women on Mango Street and she begins to understand her own conflict between her sexuality and her

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