Hector Giuria
Period 2
Oscar Wao Journal
In Junot Díaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, the theme of love dictates the major downfalls Oscar goes through in the novel. After a very brief relationship with La Jablesse, La Jablesse ends the relationship between her and Oscar and Oscar goes through a distinct type of depression which Yunior has never seen before. Yunior believed Oscar would fall into the same cycle of depression as he did other times, however, Yunior states that “it wasn’t like always. I knew something was wrong when he stopped writing” which demonstrates how after so many years of searching for love, Oscar had finally reached a breaking point and reach a different level of hopelessness which forced him to stop writing
…show more content…
Oscar parked outside Ybón’s house and when he saw her “[h]is heart seized like a bad leg and for a moment he thought about letting the whole thing go, about returning to Bosco and getting on with his miserable life, but then she stooped over, as if the whole world was watching, and that settled it,” accentuating how much Oscar truly is captivated by Ybón due to the extreme feelings of nervousness he experiences when he was about to approach her and how these emotions drove him to want to accomplish his goal even more (Díaz 315). The simile used to describe how “[h]is heart seized like a bad leg” further describes how important this moment was for Oscar and by using this simile, the author is able to display Oscar’s determination by how he was able to overcome his intense nerves in this moment just to declare his deep feelings for Ybón, as well as overcoming his other major insecurities like being obese or being a nerd (Díaz 315). Oscar’s persistent pursuit of love finally pays off and enables him to not only experience a sexual experience but to also share intimate moments with another person who has the same feelings toward him, however, as a result from this relationship, Oscar is
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is not a happy book. The Author, Junot Diaz, does a great job fooling the reader into believing the story is about the De Leon family, specifically Oscar who is an over weight nerd trying to find the love of his life, but due to a family “fuku” or curse Oscar is having a lot of trouble doing so. Instead, the story actually portrays the dark history of the Dominican Republic under the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo. Upon reading the stories of Oscar’s relatives the reader feels a powerful message of fear and oppression due to the actions of the Trujillo regime. Even after the demise of
My boy grew into a man, my girl long and slender like the blossoming mimosa at the end of the drive. Pedrito took on a certain gravity, became an important man around here. And I, Patria Mercedes? Like every woman of her house, I disappeared into what I loved, coming up now and then for air. I mean, an overnight trip by myself to a girlfriend’s, a special set to my hair, and maybe a yellow dress.
Diaz strategically uses Yunior to narrate a majority of the novel. Though Yunior’s identity as the narrrater was not revealed till almost the very end of the novel, Yunior gave a very descriptive and satirical version of the life of Oscar Wao. Yunior was Oscar’s roommate at Rutgers, the boyfriend of Oscar’s sister, Lola, and the reader
In college Oscar lives with the narrator of the novel, Yunior. Yunior describes the obsession Oscar has over a Puerto Rican goth girl that was out of his league. Her name was Jenni Muñoz and she lived in the same building as him. Oscar thought he was in love with her after the first time they had ever talked. This is a prime example of how easily Oscar falls in love with girls out of his league. He can have one conversation with a girl and think they are meant to be together. Yunior watches Oscar and Jenni get close and hangout with each other until the day when he comes home to Oscar crying in his bed. Yunior tried to see what had happened, but Oscar got angry and wanted to be left alone. This heartbreak was one of the worst Yunior had seen Oscar have: “Figured it would be like always. A week of mooning and then back to the writing. The thing that carried him. But it wasn’t like always”(Díaz 186). Usually when Oscar was rejected by
Wanting to feel the love he once felt Oscar had this propensity of falling in
One thing the Gangster forgot to tell Beli is that he was married and the wife was Trujillo blood. Since Beli was so excited about the pregnancy, she was telling everyone about it and soon the news got to the palace and the Gangster wife was furious.
Oscar is the antithesis of his culture’s idea of manliness. In the beginning we meet an Oscar who is called “Porfirio Rubirosa” (21). Everyone is proud of the boy because this is exactly what he needs to be to be a Dominican man. Men from Dominican Republic, and perhaps Spanish Caribbean men, are expected to take care of their family especially their mothers and sisters, yet they are also expected to be “playboys” who have multiple women. as the first line of the story communicates, “Our hero was not one of those Dominican cats everybody’s always going on about—he wasn’t no home-run hitter or a fly-bachetero, not a playboy with a million hots on his jock” (21). Oscar is the type of man who women say they want; kind, sensitive, considerate, smart, and romantic. He truly want to find true
“How had the breakup affected Olga? What he really was asking was: How had the breakup affected Oscar?” (16) says author describing Oscar’s emotional situation. The reason why this was a turning point for Oscar was that “his life started to going down the tubes and over the next couple of years he grew fatter and fatter” (16) since he gave up on everything, and became completely different person where he could be the happiest person if a girl talks to him, or could have a love at the first sight with any girl.
Trouble began to brew because of the woman, and it seemed logical to any normal person to discontinue the pursuit; but Oscar’s stubbornness that was frequently depicted in situations throughout the novel led him to his death. In this novel there was no other way for Oscar to die logically; he needed a big bang to bow out of his eccentric life and what better way for him, than to die for love. True love, what Oscar had been searching for his entire life and finally found, had killed him.
While at Rutgers, Oscar thought he had something going with a girl named Jenni Muñuz. They became pretty good friends, getting into deep conversations and telling each other secrets. Oscar only imagined the relationship developing into Jenni becoming his girlfriend. The Fuku had to be getting the best of Oscar at this point, as Jenni found another guy that she made her boyfriend. Again, Oscar was more than crushed. His heart had cracked into a million pieces, glued back together and the shattered again. Oscar was in such bad shape after Jenni found a boyfriend that he decided to commit suicide. Luckily for Oscar, he survived his jump from the bridge as he landed safely on the median. Oscar makes it through college and finds a nice job teaching at his old high school in New Jersey. It is not until a much needed trip to the Dominican Republic where his attitude starts to change.
As it unfolds in "The Golden Age" section, Oscar is part of a Dominican-American family that lives in Paterson, New Jersey. As a child he is pushed forward to the opposite sex by his mother, which is very proud about his early signs of virility. This is seen as one of the standing characteristics of Dominican males. Further on, we watch the decline of Oscar's success with women as he gains weight and he deepens himself in literature and isolation. This is caused by Maritza's rejection which affected him profoundly.
In the story, Oscar goes through difficult situations to want to interpret the role of the Dominican man. During the story, Oscar seeks a woman who gives him love and makes him feel like a man, but does not have the masculine qualities necessary to achieve his purpose. While his friend Yunior is the opposite, that is, his role in history is a man that women are always behind him by his charms, to the point that he cannot maintain a relationship with a woman because he cannot be faithful.
Throughout the story, Oscar is mocked by others who believe he is not “manly” like other Dominant males and that is why he is not able to get a girl. Unlike other men in his community, Oscar never physically hurt a woman. Even in the situation with Jenni, when he found her having sex with another guy, he screamed at her and threw things around crazily, but he did not lay a hand on her. Obviously, Oscar was mad when he saw Jenni with another guy because he had feelings for Jenni. Unlike the Capitán , who beat Ybón when he caught her kissing another man, Oscar did not hit Jenni. One can witness when Oscar returned to the Dominican Republic forYbón and would patiently wait for her:
In popular culture and mainstream media, women are often portrayed as overtly sexual objects that are obligated to entertain the idea of patriarchy. The strong outward appearances and characteristics of women in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz are deceiving, as they do not reveal their powerlessness against men. Throughout the entire book, women are described and seen as sexual objects through the eyes of Yunior, Oscar, and various other men. In the first chapter, Oscar and his peers treat women like they are disposable, despite their desire and need for them. This negative trend is reinforced in the next two chapters, as the narrators shamelessly describe women by emphasizing their feminine traits whilst simultaneously displaying the idea of male dominance. In addition, strong-willed women like Beli and Lola refuse to succumb to such lustful treatment, but when they are tempted with the fantasy of true love, they immediately lose their strength and surrender. In the last few chapters, these ideas are further reinforced through the sexual desire that Oscar possesses. He meets Ybon, a prostitute with a boyfriend, and immediately falls in love. Ybon is committed to her boyfriend, but because of the way she is seen in a patriarchal system, she gives in to the forbidden love that Oscar offers. No matter how strong these women were within the story, they always let the men have their way. In the end, Oscar dies because of his uncontrollable desire for love. The
No other image in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is so central to the novel’s purpose than Yunior’s dream near the end. In this dream, he witnesses a figure that looks like the deceased Oscar except with a mask, and on occasion without a face, holding a blank book open. This image is a metaphorical representation of the reason why the novel is being written at all, and why Yunior took on the task of writing it himself. Like many dictatorial regimes, the Trujillo administration sought to eliminate all information that gave opposing viewpoints. The novel gives an example of this through the capture and torture of Abelard, who was writing a historical account of the true nature of the Trujillo administration. This massive erasing of history