1. Esperanza in The House on Mango Street
However, Cisneros still lacked a literary voice so she turned to her phantasies for aid. The voice she stumbled upon was the narrator she nurtured in her childhood; thus, this voice eventually became Esperanza. Cisneros states, "I couldn't trust my own voice. People saw a little girl when they looked at me and heard a little girl's voice when I spoke. Because I was unsure of my own adult voice and often censored myself, I made up another voice, Esperanza's, to be the voice and ask things I needed answers to myself" (Cisneros, Introduction xxiv). ...
- Word Count: 2834
- Approx Pages: 11
- Has Bibliography
- Grade Level: Undergraduate