How The Garcia Girls Lost Their Accent By Julia Alvarez Analysis

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Julia Alvarez wrote the novel “How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents”. Alvarez, (a Dominican-American novelist) was born in New York City. Her story is about four sisters (The Garcia family) who were living an established, upper class life in the Dominican Republic. They were forced to flee from the Dominican Republic to the United States due to their father’s opposition to Rafael Leonidas Trujillo’s dictatorship. The Garcia family were forced to face the challenges that came along with being an immigrant family in a foreign land. In her novel “How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents,” Alvarez highlights the challenges of immigration, cultural readjustments and family conflicts. The Challenges of Immigration and Cultural Readjustments
Alvarez wrote about the daily challenges the family were …show more content…

She was harassed at school by malicious and prejudiced boys, and felt isolated by her limited English language abilities. Her discomfort with puberty was exacerbated by an encounter with a perverted American exhibitionist in a car. She dealt with these issues later in life by becoming a psychologist and analyzing her family's myriad mental problem” (Spark Notes Editors, 2002). Family Conflicts
The conflict within the Garcia family took place during the cultural rupture and the point of political. Since their father had rebelled against Trujillo’s oppressive dictatorship, it impacted the Garcia sisters to become rebellious against their parents’ disciplines. The Garcia sisters learned new American habits. They went out to parties, had affairs and even tried drugs.
"I don't want loose women in my family," he had cautioned all his daughters. Warnings were delivered communally, for even though there was usually the offending daughter of the moment, every woman's character could use extra scolding” (Alvarez,

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