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The Dissolution of the Family in Pocho Compared to Mona in the Promised Land

Akademische Schriftenreihe V146067

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Erschienen am 01.03.2010, Auflage: 1. Auflage
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783640570164
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 24

Beschreibung

Seminar paper from the year 2006 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: 2,3, University of Freiburg, course: Ethnic Novel in American Literature, language: English, abstract: Index I. Introduction 1 II. Pocho 2.1 Background to the Novel 2 2.2 Territorial Obscurity 2 2.3 Education 4 2.4 Richards Relation to his Parents 4 2.5 The Dissolution of the Family 6 III. Mona in the Promised Land 9 3.1 Background to the Novel 9 3.2 Monas Relation to her Parents 9 IV. Conclusion 13 V. Bibliography I. Introduction This term paper deals with two pieces of American immigrant literature of different culture, political background, time and setting. The novel Pocho by Jose Antonio Villareal published in 1959 was the first Chicano novel. It was written primarily for an Anglo- American audience in order to explain the life of a Pocho. Villareal wrote the novel without any guideline as no one had entered this political vacuum before.1 The novel Mona in the Promised Land by the Chinese-American writer Gish Jen published in 1996 introduces us into the multicultural life of the predominantly Jewish New York suburb of Scarshill in 1968. I will show in this term paper that despite the many differences in the two novels there also are many commonalities and parallels what life and the problems between the two protagonists and their parents concerns. I will furthermore try to present in detail that the familiar sorrow in both novels is closely connected with the complex conflict of generations within two cultures, as well as the protagonists search for identity that results from this. In the first part I will analyze Richards changing relationship towards his parents. In the second part I will show that also Mona despite her completely different background and environment faces similar problems which finally lead to the break up with predominantly her mother. Furthermore I will expose that Mona and Richard share common interests and ways. At the end of my work I will finally compare the parallels but also show differences between the two novels. II. Pocho 2.1 Background to the Novel The term Pocho is an expression for a Mexican who is born and raised in the United States. It is used with an abusive connotation to describe Mexican Americans in the USA. Pochos are often perceived by Mexicans to be badly-educated and without a proper sense of culture. Jose Antonio Villarreals novel Pocho is set after the Mexican Revolution of 1910 when millions of Mexicans migrated to the USA in order to get work by the so-called first BraceroProgram. [.]

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