Forcing an individual to fit in within a society is not uncommon; The US accomplish this on the daily basis. All to create …show more content…
Gloria Anzaldúa story is the perfect example for a “Gorgeous mosaic” type of view. The two dominant languages created something that a large number of people understand and even write. However, even when these two languages and at the same type cultures rise the aspect of a” melting pot” came into glimpse. “ I remember being caught speaking Spanish at recess- that was good for three locks on the knuckles with a sharp ruler” this is the really within the USA if you don't bend to the rules you were more than likely to be punished because everyone needed to bend to the will of the government. She was punished for standing up to the system; Reading her work people can learn from her that, not only did she struggle with the “Melting pot” system within the country, but she has also struggled with people within her own small “nation”. Girls shame each other, her own parents were even telling her to just stop and just obey the rules, much like in the case writing in “The joys of reading and …show more content…
I believe this even more of a theme in the essay “Graduation” where the author is in the steps, towards the uncertain future adulthood and she question the path that she will surely be forced to take once she graduates. Maya Angelou questions the way the society in America functions and even bashes the immigrant community in her school. “The melting pot and the gorgeous Mosaic” were not as heavily seem like in the other two essays, yet everything was still there. In this case; the path that she is forced to endure because of the fact that she was African American is the melting pot. She need to do as the society seem to agree on and that was it, in the other hand the “Gorgeous Mosaic” is just the fact she is able to graduate with some many different groups of