House On Mango Street Gender Roles

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In the book House On Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, Esperanza tries to defy women’s gender roles while others blindly follow them, or give into them. Many chapters in the book are about gender roles like “No Speak English” or “Linoleum Roses.” but one that stuck out to me is “Alesia Who See’s Mice.” After Alicia’s mother died, her father was depending on Alesia to spend the rest of her life behind a rolling pin, or in a factory, but she wants to go to college. She is defying her gender roles by studying for college but she is also forced to wake up early and make lunch for her working dad. So in some ways she is defying gender roles but she is also giving into them because she has to get up early to cook. “Two trains and a bus, because she doesn't want to spend her entire life behind a rolling pin.”(31-32). Esperanza is narrating how Alesia is constantly moving around from university to house to factory. So Alesia is doing her best to defy gender roles.
Another chapter that stuck out to me about gender roles is “My Name.” Esperanza describes the meaning of her name using the words muddy and how it is the same name of her great grandmother. She was a wild woman who wouldn’t marry until Esperanza’s great grandfather kidnapped her. And …show more content…

I wrote multiple words that I translated into spanish that I thought were the main ideas or main keywords of the chapter. I wrote the words, Dinero (money), Inglis (english), Tin (Hojalata), TV (tv), Homesick (Nostalgico) , and a couple others. I made the choices for the project because I wanted to bring out the deeper meaning of how she is doing in America. And how it relates to the themes of gender roles because she is being judged on her weight and she has to take care of her kids. But it also connects to symbolism because of her crying over her children speaking

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