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Aria A Memoir Of A Bilingual Childhood Summary

Decent Essays

In Aria: A Memoir of a Bilingual Childhood by Richard Rodriguez, various stylistic devices and rhetorical strategies are used such as symbolism, and pathos. Symbolism Rodriguez uses in the piece, consists of his home, and the general public. To young Rodriguez, his time at home represented comfort, and safety. Furthermore Rodriguez's Home represented a “pleasing, soothing, consoling reminder” that he was in a sheltered environment away from “los gringos.” In contrast, the general public which consisted of Rodriguez’s neighborhood, school, and the store symbolised a time spent frightened by the english language sounds, the experience of feeling apart from english speaking children, and the idea that his parents were not powerful enough to protect him. Such symbolism is also used in order for Rodriguez to appeal to the audience's emotions in order to persuade them into agreeing with his argument on bilingual education. By Rodriguez sharing his experience of feeling afraid of the public language, he teaches the audience that while “it would have pleased me to hear my teachers address me in Spanish when I entered the classroom” he would delay learning the language of a public society. As Rodriguez and his siblings began to assimilate into the english language, he found that “The house I returned to each afternoon was quiet. Intimate Sounds no longer rushed to the door to greet me. There were other noises inside.” While this marked a lost of intimacy and the private language

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