Essay sample library > The Mother Tongue by Demetria Martinez

The Mother Tongue by Demetria Martinez

2023-12-20 12:14:23

Demetria Martínez's mother tongue is divided into five parts and conclusions. The first three parts of the text were Mary / María's narrator, and for the first time I met José Luis, a refuge from El Salvador at the age of 19. The fourth and fifth parts in chronological order return to a tragic experience at the age of seven, then travel to Salvador with my son. The last conclusion was a letter from José Luis to Mary / Maria after going to El Salvador.

There are rarely good novels about politics. Along with the butterfly, with her mother tongue from the poet, Demetria Martinez of Chitiana, the recipient of the Western National Fiction Creation Award in 1994. She talked about the young Tikana who fell in love with Salvador refugees who are suffering from insurgents in their own country and are now unforgettable and expelled to beautiful America. Both authors are intertwined with a strong political and personal theme. Both books center on mature young women and celebrate women. Both of them reveal a strong connection between spirit and politics. Both follow the structure of the journal, and different voices speak at different times. Both treasures

Demetria Martínez's mother tongue is divided into five parts and conclusions. The first three parts of the text were Mary / María's narrator, and for the first time I met José Luis, a refuge from El Salvador at the age of 19. The fourth and fifth parts in chronological order return to a tragic experience at the age of seven, then travel to Salvador with my son. - English is an invisible door. Immigrants are outsiders. Native speaker is a gatekeeper. Regardless of whether the door is open or not, it is the responsibility of a broken English user to rely on their view. Sadly, as Tan's mother discussed in her article "Native Language", in most cases the door is closed. Before they knew her, people treated her mother's attitude because of her wrong English. Tan sympathizes with his mother and other immigrants