A gentle girl sacrificed for years has unexpectedly revived her talent by filling a life-size doll with honey. "Youngest doll" based on family anecdotes is an amazing literary expression of Rosario Ferré's feminism and social concerns. This is the first story of a collection published in Spanish in Papeles de Pandora in 1976 and translated into English by the author. As a daughter of a former governor in Puerto Rico, Ferre depicts the relaxation of restricted women who restricted entry into patriarchal culture. Anger was a creative form rather than an extreme form with ten stories. And it made Ferret the leading female writer in Latin America.
Most of the middle class and upper class women of The Youngest Doll are masculine and resist mental doll presence or return to fantasy. In terms of power and influence, these women and Puerto Rico themselves have the same relationships between men and men, and Ferre extends the artistic boundary in writing. The story from reality to a nightmare is deep, a satirical feeling full of satire and black humor, usually the experimental form. Architects dream of a beautiful bridge, "Open and close the arch like a crocodile", Mercedes · Benz gives the impression that "it shines like a black rabbit in the dark." "Sleeping Beauty" is a collage of letters, presentations and photo titles that can draw cold conclusions from unwritten content. This series includes stories about Ferre's "When a woman loves a man", a sociable woman united to survive with a prostitute, and a female writer who "instigates anger art by sarcasm" . Finally, she examined that the experience in the US as a Latin American-American woman brought a double cultural perspective to her writing.
"The youngest doll" depicts the post-operative Puerto Rican society from a women's point of view, showing the impact of industrialization and the accompanying materialism on specific women's lives. It uses well-known grammar practices. However, as Heinrick Ibsen's play The Doll House does, instead of women's dominant dolls Ferré's dolls are made by women and ultimately controlled. In addition to promoting women's empowerment, the story also points out the adverse effects of industrialization and colonization on all Puerto Rico. Ferre's story depicts the collapsing society of modern Puerto Rico. The aristocracy of sugar cane is "extinction" in society, it is deeply divided and confused by its numerous influence in history. Over the centuries, the Spaniards dominated Puerto Rico and seriously affected language, food, culture, and religion.
Among the 'youngest dolls', Filay resembles folklore in many ways, borrowing from the reality of Puerto Rico society and revolutionizing ideas to conquer 'evil' principles and materialism I wrote a wonderful story I told you. It is written in Spanish (not in English, it is not an official educational language from 1898 to 1948). The story of Ferre can be seen as a traditional folk tale, said by women in the late 20th century. This type of very familiar society