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Similarities Between Living Up The Street And The House On Mango Street

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DIscrimination Toward Gary and Esperanza Many Chicana men and women were unprivileged, being forced to live life facing challenges with no escape because of their race. They searched for a never ending way out. In the books, Living Up The Street, By Gary Soto, and The House On Mango Street, By Sandra Cisneros, both authors relate to their life as a Latina/Latino incorporating their emotions and some past experiences from their childhood. Both books follow the characters throughout their lives, but more so in Living up the Street, By Gary Soto. This shows through the development of the characters throughout the chapters/vignettes. Cisneros, the author of The House On Mango Street, and Soto, the author of Living up the street both show discrimination. They show discrimination through their poor neighborhoods, the name calling between the characters, and the jobs they were entitled to make, which led them to making a lower profit than the whites throughout their lives. In The House On Mango Street, By Sandra Cisneros, The author talks about her outdated and poor community in a Latino section of Chicago through Esperanza's character. She is forced to constantly move from broken down apartments, to tiny rundown homes. Esperanza recently moved into a poor and outdated, mostly Latino neighborhood in the city of Chicago, which is very similar to the author's hometown. In vignette number one Esperanza says, “The house on Mango Street is ours, and we don't have to pay rent to

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