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Flaming Iguana

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Flaming Iguanas by Erika Lopez and The Road by Cormac McCarthy critiques America, while transgressing heteronormativity and modifying mobility and identity. Traveling west is an adventure and an opportunity to discover oneself, it is also an extension to exercise one's freedom. In Flaming Iguanas as a woman,Tomato Rodriguez travels across the country to see her dad in California. She transgressing the meaning of the road, whilst pushing the boundaries of heteronormativity ideals that are placed on women. In The Road, father and son travel to the coast through burned America. The road becomes a space to develop a bond that is of mutual respect, furthermore an opportunity to invent one’s identity. Both novels critique American capitalism but …show more content…

Tomato escapes domestication by going on the road. She has a fear of being entrapped and domesticated, a “domestic - bliss love”, mocking the common societal beliefs that are placed on women (32). Similarly, the road presents itself as a challenge to Tomato granted she is a bisexual,Chicano woman on the road. In previous road novels the road is a place for white hetero-men having an adventure. As a atypical woman on the road she is transgressing heteronormativity, reshaping the relation between mobility and masculinity. Through her disparagement, she also critiques the traditional American culture of the role of women in …show more content…

In the novel the father and son’s relationship is emphasized, centralizing love is critical. One night the boy dreams of a penguin that “nobody had wound . . . up”, the penguin symbolizes man’s creations taking over and getting out of control which caused the catastrophic apocalypse (36). It critiques American capitalism; creation as an uncontrollable force. This road novel is unique in a sense that a boy is presented as young and naive, a hope for a better future. In an apocalyptic world, father and son stumble upon the coke dispenser, the father pried the machine and “sat looking at a Coca Cola” (23). This event is surreal to the father because it is a remnant of the world before the apocalypse, by the same token, it is a romanticized view of capitalism. Obtaining the Coca Cola is presented as a surreal event where the father had to sit down, to preserve this ideal dreamlike event. The irony is clear that technological advancement caused the fall of mankind yet, the man still admires capitalism and technology. It exposes America's weakness of consumerism, wanting to acquire things, but overlooking the adverse effects that we have on our environment. Accordingly, it critiques American society, that we are blinded by consumerism and choose to overlook the ramifications. It reveals our flaws and American ideals that are rooted in

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