Diaz Character Analysis

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One of the many clever things that Diaz does in his book is use foils within the characters. He has many characters contrast with one another, which sheds light on both their positive and negative qualities. Many of the foils make you pick a favorite or distinguish between the “good guy” and the “bad guy”. Some of the foils include Yunior and Oscar, La Inca and Belicia, and Belicia and Lola. When it comes to Lola and Beicia foiling one another, they are not really opposites, instead Lola is a lot like her mother despite her hatred towards her. If you take a close look at Yunior and Oscar we can see why they contrast each other so much. First off, let us focus on our main character, the beloved Oscar. Oscar has a love for video games, he plays …show more content…

Yunior is our narrator, but makes it clear to us that he is not a nerd like Oscar. He likes the ladies and is actually very suave with them. He is a good influence on Oscar when it comes to turning him into a Dominican playboy, but if we look deeply, Oscar was actually more of an influence on Yunior than he realizes. While Yunior is trying to turn Oscar into a man, the tables turn and Oscar teaches Yunior how to be a real man and learn how to respect women. Oscar was not violent with women even though he chased after them, which was actually quite admirable for Yunior. Yunior is the perfect example of the machismo that Diaz is trying to portray in his Dominican stereotyping. According to a study done in Stanford, we learn that males who consider themselves to be macho have an: “expansive and almost uncontrollable” sexual appetite. Being that this sexual appetite is so uncontrollable, macho men try and feed this appetite in any way possible. They focus on sexual dominance because for them it is all about their pride, like we see in Yunior. It is a competition between men to demonstrate their machoism focusing on who can conquer more women. In a machoistic man’s mind there are only two roles for women which include “la casa y la calle”, or the house and the street which is a very antifeminist idea in which Diaz portrays in his book. Men want to dominate and women want to be protected, but the ironic thing is that many times women need to be protected from their own partners due to domestic abuse—either verbal, mental, or physical. Diaz showed the violence and rage that men have inside them, and also the vulnerability and lack of confidence some of the women have being that they went without defending themselves. While the book never mentioned Yunior raising his hand on a girl, he was not the most respectful towards women including Lola, which may be why Lola is “the one that got

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