How To Tame A Wild Tongue Essay

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    Natalie Gonzalez 3/14/2007 Gloria Anzaldua, author of the article " How to tame a Wild Tongue", expresses very strong views on how she feels her native Chicano Spanish language needs to be preserved in order to maintain cultural unity when used as a private form of communication. Her statement, " for a people who cannot identify with either standard (formal, Castilian) Spanish, nor standard English, what recourse is left to them but to create their own language?" suggests that despite the societal

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    chapter, “How to Tame a Wild Tongue.” She translates some of the Spanish words and phrases into English such as ruca to girl or women and periquiar to talk (Anzaldua 474). Other phrases she doesn’t translate to English. A phrase she does not translate is where she converses with her mother about wanting Anzaldua to speak in English. Part of the text was in English and then it converts to Spanish (471). She switches between the languages throughout the essay because it demonstrates how the languages

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    Language and identity are two things that are very closely related. In the excerpt of “How to Tame a wild Tongue” by Gloria Anzaldua, the author does an excellent job of explaining how identity and language blend right together. By hearing someone speak their language one could determine a person’s cultural values and their identity. In the excerpt Anzaldua says, “For a people who cannot entirely identify with either standard Spanish or English, what recourse is left to them but to create their own

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    system, all just an ever progressing for the purpose of a better society does, in fact, stereotypes its students. As a matter of fact, some stereotypes start within the walls of a school. “In How to Tame a Wild Tongue” we as the readers see the everyday struggles the author when through in the education system and how because of her race she was treated differently during her school life. Stereotypes are part of our everyday life and are used not only by the media but by everyday citizens as well. A very

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    always the answer as various individuals fight against the American traditions and stereotypes and exceed the expectation of their minority groups. Even within minorities there is a type of peer pressure to assimilate to the American ways. In How to Tame a Wild Tongue by Gloria Anzaldua. The author explains that identity is intertwined by the way people speak. Having an accent is seem as a big taboo or something that should be fix,a similar issue is address in The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and

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    more. Take as an example Chicanos are mestizos who have to live on the very border between different cultures and countries. In “How to Tame a Wild Tongue” by Gloria Anzaldua, she argues the negative social attitude toward Chicano ways of speaking and the harmful effect of this negative attitude on the self-identity of Chicano people who live in borderlands. Despite on how Americans are compelled to disregard their culture and subdue to American culture in order to fit in, using your own native language

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    In the essay “How to Tame a Wild Tongue” by Gloria Anzaldua she uses several rhetoric modes. In this essay, she talks about the challenges of learning how to speak English. From being punished for speaking Spanish by her teachers, to taking many classes through her childhood to help her learn the language and get rid of her accent. One of the first rhetoric modes I found in the first excerpt was how she was using a narrative mode. She tells a story about her childhood and how she was disciplined

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    when they try and stick to their heritage and they were shunned and neglected by their own people whenever they try to adhere to the standards of their new country. The effects of marginalization can be seen in Gloria Anzaldua’s essay “How to Tame a Wild Tongue.” She is an American writer who expresses her feelings about social and cultural struggles that Americans with a deep Mexican heritage like her face when being raised in the United States. Anzaldua believes that everyone in the minority ethnic

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    Gloria Anzaldúa article “How to Tame a Wild Tongue,” she shows us how different worlds so close can be so different. Anzaldúa shows that people have restricted freedom in society by the social norms set in them. Anzaldúa pressed her awareness and distraught on how people treat her depending on the type of language she uses. She also explains some of her emotions towards the way people are like with speaking and listening to accents. The article is how Anzaldúa explains how culture and accent shapes

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