The House On Mango Street Gender Roles

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In the “Boys & Girls” vignette, Esperanza notes the division between sexes. She makes sure that the division between male and female sexes is made as she says, “The boys and girls live in separate worlds. The boys in their universe and we in ours” (8). “This instance portrays the role played by gender in which male and female are set apart in the society – that is, by a society’s definitions of femininity and masculinity . . .” (Vichiensing, “Investigating ‘Othering’ in Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street”). The boys and girls of the Mango Street neighborhood do not socialize with each other because they must maintain their feminine and masculine behaviors. They live in two different worlds where they live by rules: rules that give …show more content…

Esperanza must socialize with her younger sister Nenny, who is too young to be her friend, but a girl nonetheless. She says her brothers “got plenty to say to [her] and Nenny inside the house. But outside their house[,] they can’t be seen talking to girls” (8). Why? Because talking to their sisters and other girls will invalidate their masculinity and it will taint their image. They cannot be seen talking to the girls because they will lose their status with their friends and their social clique will be intruded. This is not acceptable in a male-dominated society, therefore, they must stick to the rules: women ought never to meddle with men social spheres maintaining their feminity, while men can conveniently intrude into the women social sphere sustaining their masculinity. This sort of male privilege is clear in The House on Mango Street and it is made clearer by Esperanza’s distinction between boys and …show more content…

A case in point is the Vargas's who's mother, Rosa Vargas — have "too many and too much" (29) kids. The children are unsupervised most of the time because Rosa could not keep full attention on each one of them. However, Esperanza says, “It’s not her fault you know, except she is their mother and only one against so many” (29). This quote implies the absence of the father who does not bear the parental responsibility in the relationship. Therefore, being the only parent she is, Rosa is "tired all the time from buttoning and bottling and babying . . . [and she] cries every day for the man who left without even leaving a dollar for bologna or a note explaining how come" (29). This only shows that the women’s roles are set only to raise the children and to take care of the

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