Christina Garcia's "Cuban Dream" Christina Garcia's "Cuban Dream" is a theme in which the periodic nature of time and supernaturality is repeated. Through this book, members of the del Pino family were reviewing the same events and situations. It features repeating mental illness over 3 generations including attempted suicide, personal exile, and love affair. Celia knew that times would be repeated unless the family's history was kept recorded.
Meanwhile, Christina Garcia 's novel' Cuba of Dreams 'tells the story of the women' s family of Cuban families who have been dispersed through the revolution but still connected through a common past. The story is a polyphony of several sounds and in turn explains their world from their perspective. Characters run Lourdes, anti-Castro exiles, a series of "Yankee graffiti bakery" and Felicia. Pillar, Lourdes' daughter and ambitious punk artist, returned to Cuba and reconnected to her grandmother, decided to make her life meaningful now.
Cuba is an important part in Christina Garcia 's 1992 novel "Cuban Dream". This work is examined through the role of rich women and men, emphasizing the motherhood chain and the strong experience of the Cubans. The island nation of Cuba is drawn from the inside and the outside, the distance is triggered by asylum fiction when exiles are measured and removed from the heart. Different views of Cuba have both inspiration and consequences of different exiles. Through analyzing the three female characters, I chose to treat Cuba's theme as text and background: Cuban exiles from Brooklyn, Lourdes del Pinot Puente, when a novel was held Like her daughter Pilar 13 years old, Lourdes's mother, Celia Del Pino, she works hard at the seaside house of Cuba. In Cuba, Lourdes' sister Felicia felt this irrevocable distance from her worshiped son, Ivanito, and had a strong spiritual connection with her. "What is he talking about?"
Cuba's dream was a novel published in 1992 by an American author born in Cuba, Christina Garcia. This story occurred between Cuba and the United States from the 1930s to the 1980s, experienced three generations of ups and downs from Celia Del Pino, daughter Lourdes, and Felicia to granddaughter Pila. Seoul novel is a mixture of letters of the first person and characters of the first person and occasional letters, and it may jump in a nonlinear and timely manner. In this novel the history and culture of Cuba is very important and the Caribbean santoria played an important role in the Cuban revolution and became the driving force for the selection and wealth of several families. When Lourdes left Cuba and went to America, Felicia was facing an unstable society and her own mental health problems. Dreams in Cuba will also explore topics such as psychosis, political violence, idealism and corruption, spousal abuse, and family tension.