Monday, November 11, 2019
Analysis Essay of Aria by Richard Rodriguez
NOUR BAHRI EN1111 Academic Writing M. Antoniadou 29th October2012 Analysis essay of ââ¬Å"Ariaâ⬠by Richard Rodriguez (2nd draft) This essay, titled ââ¬Å"Ariaâ⬠, originally published in 2008, is an autobiographic essay of the authorââ¬â¢s childhood, Richard Rodriguezââ¬â¢. In his essay, Richard is against bilingual educators, who think that children in their first years of school should be educated in their native language. According to him this education system is wrong, wonââ¬â¢t be beneficial, therefore children should be educated in the same language as the public one.Rodriguezââ¬â¢s main point is to strongly encourage children of immigrant parents to adopt English, the ââ¬Å"public languageâ⬠as their main language in order to become assimilated in the ââ¬Å"public societyâ⬠and have a better future. Ricardo describes his childhood as a child of Mexican immigrant parents studying in an English school in America, where he had problems in commu nicating at school because he did not know the ââ¬Å"public languageâ⬠, English.At first, he was shy and timid at school because he was feeling uncomfortable with English, but with his parentsââ¬â¢ and teacherââ¬â¢s help he ââ¬Å"raised his hand to volunteer an answerâ⬠, from that day he ââ¬Å"moved very far from the disadvantaged childâ⬠(288). He then started feeling as an American citizen. Although Rodriguez admits that he lost the strong intimacy at home with his parents, he emphasizes that the ââ¬Å"loss implies the gainâ⬠(291). Rodriguez supports his argument against bilingual education by using mainly the contrast technique in order for the readers to become more sensitive to his topic and argumentRichardââ¬â¢s entire essay is based on the contrast between ââ¬Å"the lossâ⬠in private and ââ¬Å"the gainâ⬠in public. By presenting those two opposed extremes, readers become more sensitive to his argument as his essay becomes more reali stic. In the part of the private loss, Ricardo faces problems at home, since he came to believe that he was an American citizen, ââ¬Å"at leastâ⬠(288). So the past refers to before Richard believes that he was an American citizen at the age of 7. Ricardo uses frequently the negation arks in order to support that they remained a loving family, but one greatly changed, ââ¬Å"No longer so close: no longer boundâ⬠, ââ¬Å"neither my older brother nor sisterâ⬠, ââ¬Å"Nor did Iâ⬠this last in a separate sentence to accentuate his position and the negation (288). He contrasts this new situation with the one they had in the past where ââ¬Å"after dinner each night, the family gatheredâ⬠(287). Readers feel that in the past family bonds and ties were stronger and the house was full of joy and laughs, ââ¬Å"everyone laughedâ⬠(287).Thereby, Richard used ââ¬Å"weâ⬠(ââ¬Å"we playedâ⬠) as for him and his family that has a stronger meaning and connota tion since they where feeling closer, as a whole. But also, in the past Richard was impatient to go back home, where he could actually speak the language, now he says, ââ¬Å"gone was the desperate, urgent, intense feeling of being at homeâ⬠(288). Furthermore, after this feeling of closeness diminished, ââ¬Å"silenceâ⬠started taking place in the house as Richard explains that ââ¬Å"as we children learned more and more English, we shared fewer and fewer words with our parentsâ⬠(288).So in the past, children were more comfortable in speaking Spanish with their parents and spoke a language, which the parents actually understand and respond with ease, the house was full of ââ¬Å"language of homeâ⬠(286). By speaking English so much, a gap between Richard and his parents grew. After this process of Americanization, ââ¬Å"the silence at home, however, was finally more than a literal silenceâ⬠(289). He uses a lot words in relation to the ear and hearing as â â¬Å"soundsâ⬠ââ¬Å"listenâ⬠, ââ¬Å"listeningâ⬠, ââ¬Å"heardâ⬠and ââ¬Å"speakingâ⬠(289).Furthermore, Spanish started becoming unfamiliar to him and English, which is the ââ¬Å"public languageâ⬠became his ââ¬Å"primary languageâ⬠. In the past he used to call his parents ââ¬Å"mama and papaâ⬠, and now that English is his primary language he calls them ââ¬Å"motherâ⬠and ââ¬Å"fatherâ⬠(289). At the end of his essay Richard said that his ââ¬Å"childhood started to endâ⬠the day he took the decision that his wants to feel like an American citizen.Richard, most probably, associates the word childhood with his past, before he came to believe that he was an American citizen; a past where he had strong bonds with his parents, the feeling of security and other that they are his parents, Spanish united them. However, as he became less confident with his private identity, he started becoming increasingly confident of his new pu blic identity because the belief that he belonged in public had taken hold. Richard presents in his essay the other side of the ââ¬Å"gameâ⬠, of learning English and feeling as an American citizen because as he said ââ¬Å"the loss implies the gainâ⬠(291).By the gain he means the gain in public, public identity. An important dramatic event occurred, it is the one that resulted in a big change in Richardââ¬â¢s life. And this was the day Richard raised his hand in class to volunteer an answer. This event brought him a lot forward, as he was no longer feeling as a disadvantaged child. Moreover, as Richard began to hear more and more English, ââ¬Å"the high, troubling sounds of los gringosâ⬠became unnoticeable to him; he was ââ¬Å"no longer an alien in gringo societyâ⬠(288). Whereas before he came to believe he was an American citizen, ââ¬Å"los gringosâ⬠had a bad connotation, full of ââ¬Å"bitterness or distrustâ⬠(288).Rodriguez became more conf ident of himself in speaking English, and he finally heard words, not just sounds. Richard insists in the difference between ââ¬Å"sound and wordsâ⬠(which in the past sounds were helping him in understanding the situation) (288). He came to realize that ââ¬Å"sound and word were tightly weddedâ⬠after his Americanization (288). He has also contrasting feelings; he was often ââ¬Å"bemusedâ⬠and always ââ¬Å"relievedâ⬠to realize how ââ¬Å"silent, though crowded with wordsâ⬠his day in public had been (288). Richard means that, since he was feeling more comfortable with English, the words were more powerful and meaningful.Before the dramatic event, English was a ââ¬Å"foreign languageâ⬠to him, he felt like a ââ¬Å"strangerâ⬠to it (287). Becoming more familiar with English helped Richard to achieve many things. He began doing well in school, he made friends and he was feeling more comfortable talking to people in public. Assimilating to the American culture helped Richard feel more at ease among the other American students. So we understand that the ââ¬Å"public identityâ⬠he achieved was a great success to him (288). Finally Richard at the end of his essay, make things more clear, and the contrast is still visible.He responds to bilingual educators, who have to distinguish between ââ¬Å"private individualityâ⬠and ââ¬Å"public individualityâ⬠. While ââ¬Å"becoming assimilated into public society, such assimilation makes possible the achievement of public individualityâ⬠(290). Richard points out that ââ¬Å"in public, by contrast, full individuality is achievedâ⬠(290). So according to him, the public gain is really important and that is why in his essay the ââ¬Å"gainâ⬠is stressed more than the ââ¬Å"lossâ⬠. To conclude, in his autobiographic essay, Richard successfully used the contrast technique in order to give a full image of his argument and be more convincing.There was a deep intimacy with his family and the painful feeling of public alienation. However, as he grew up and with his Americanization, this became only the past; meaning that there were no longer good bonds in the family and in public he gained an identity and individuality. Rodriguez offers a contrasting truth: while our heritage and culture may remain forever tied to our native language, the only way we can truly become a part of our community and fit in is to dominate the current spoken language. Word count: 1280 Work Citation: Rodriguez, Richard. The Norton Reader;2008, ww Norton Company,
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