Many times throughout The House of Mango Street collection characters who do not speak English, either by choice, or incapability, have issues integrating into American society or have less worth to native English speakers. In document C, Mamacita comes to America with her son to live with her husband. Unable, and unwilling to speak English, Mamacita continues to be homesick and shies away anyone who tries to converse with her. Then, her son begins to sing English songs, his mother strongly protests, “No speak English, no speak English”. He was beginning to lose his ethnic culture and his roots to his mother. In document D a man named Geraldo was in a hit-and-run and died, a woman he had met earlier had not known anything about him and was not able to tell the police or hospital staff anything that would lead them to believe he was legal, or important to anyone, because he did not speak …show more content…
Discrimination is generally a big issue in America. Anyone not a white male faces some kind of discrimination. In The House of Mango Street we see both gender and ethnic discrimination. In document B Esperanza recalls, “Today while cooking oatmeal she is Madame Butterfly…I could’ve been somebody you know? Esperanza, you go to school.” Madame Butterfly is a tragic opera about a young Japanese girl who sacrifices everything and marries an American soldier, and when he leaves her for an American woman she commits suicide. Esperanza’s mother was smart but sacrificed everything and is putting everything on the line by leaving school and completely relying on her husband for an income. In document D Geraldo “no last name” was in a hit and run. He had nothing on him, no ID, license, or social security to indicate who he was, or if he was legal. There was an opportunity to save him, but because he was just a “wetback” he did not get the attention he should have and