Junot Diaz Flashcards

1
Q

Fiesta, 1980: What are some of the troubling traits of toxic masculinity exhibited in this story?

A
  • domestic violence (hitting children/wife)
  • infidelity
  • oppression/dismissal of women
  • quick temper
  • lack of empathy/understanding

It is significant that in this story we see these traits being exhibited by a father; we start to see how these habits are passed on from father to son.

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2
Q

Fiesta, 1980: What “happens” in this story?

A

The narrator’s aunt and uncle have recently immigrated and are having a party to celebrate. The narrator’s family is attending, but the narrator is not allowed to eat either before or at the party because he always throws up in the car. Through the evening at the party and the narrator’s flashbacks we gain insight into their family dynamic.

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3
Q

Who narrates most of these stories?

A

Yunior

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4
Q

Drown: What is the name of the friend the narrator is avoiding?

A

Beto

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5
Q

What is the narrator’s brother’s name?

A

Rafa

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6
Q

Drown: Who does the narrator live with?

A

His mother

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7
Q

Drown: Who does the narrator live with?

A

His mother.

This is a good example of looking into how women fit into the masculinity of the barrio. He describes his mother as being so quiet that he often forgets she is there, sometimes even seeming to blend into the wall. We see how women, especially mothers, are caregivers for their children often long into adulthood.

Women are a quiet, repressed presence, almost in the background of the lives of Diaz’s narrators.

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8
Q

Drown: What was one of the narrator’s and Beto’s main pastimes?

A

Shoplifting

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9
Q

Drown: What is a “pato”?

A

It’s the Spanish word for homosexual (and a slur)

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10
Q

Drown: Why is the narrator avoiding Beto?

A

Beto was his very best friend, but is gay; the narrator and Beto twice engaged in sex acts together before Beto left for college.

There is also an undercurrent of inferiority, because Beto went to college and “got out” and the narrator is living a dead beat life.

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11
Q

How to Date…: What happens in this story?

A

The narrator, Yunior, describes what to do to prepare for and carry out a date. The story is attentive to cultural differences that his romantic interests might have, and offers advice on how to successfully navigate them. No matter their varied background, the goal is the same: action. These encounters don’t often live up to the narrators hopes.

We subtly glimpse the hardships of the narrator’s life (“government cheese”), but also notice that he treats women interchangeably and as objects. He is not interested in their individuality, but only how that individuality might be exploited for sex. He is not interested in anything but a physical relationship with them.

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12
Q

Edison, New Jersey: What is the name of the narrator’s coworker?

A

Wayne

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13
Q

Edison, New Jersey: What are Wayne and the narrator’s jobs?

A

Furniture delivery and assembly

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14
Q

Edison, New Jersey: What happens in this story?

A

We learn a little bit about the narrator’s job and life. Wayne and the narrator have twice tried to deliver a pool table to a house where no one answers. They are finally let in by a maid, with whom the narrator makes a connection. She’s Dominican, like him, and asks for a ride into NYC.

Even though it’s against the rules, the narrator gives it to her, leaving Wayne to finish the table alone. It seems she may not be a “maid” but some kind of mail-order wife. The narrator is discouraged when he learns that she went back to living with her “boss.” That just seems to be the way things go.

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15
Q

Edison, New Jersey: What are Wayne and the narrator trying to deliver in this story?

A

A Gold Crown pool table; the person keeps not being home for the delivery.

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16
Q

Edison, New Jersey: Where does the name of this story come from?

A

Each day Wayne and the narrator try to guess where their first delivery will be the next day. The narrator is often right. At the end of the story, he predicts that the next day’s first delivery will be in Edison, New Jersey.

17
Q

Aurora: Where does the story take its title from?

A

“Aurora” is the name of the narrator’s on-again/off-again girlfriend with whom he has a tumultuous relationship. She is a drug addict, and has spent time in prison, and he sometimes beats her.

18
Q

Aurora: What is the name of the narrator’s friend/roommate in this story?

A

Cut

19
Q

Aurora: What happens in this story?

A

The narrator details his troubled relationship with Aurora, a drug addict with whom he’s romantically involved. He uses her for sex and she uses him for money; they try to connect emotionally but neither of them can seem to make it work. They are violent with each other - she scratches him and he hits her. The narrator’s friend says he should stop seeing her, but he can’t seem to break the habit.

20
Q

Aurora: Discuss gender in this story.

A

It’s easy to see Aurora has the “bad” one in this story, someone the narrator needs to stay away from, but reading closely reveals the narrator’s flaws as well.

He uses Aurora for sex even though he knows she is troubled and possibly ill (and might even steal from him). He is too self-interested to understand when she is trying to tell him that she had been pregnant and either miscarried or had an abortion. Finally, he is violent with her.

21
Q

Aurora: Discuss gender in this story.

A

It’s easy to see Aurora has the “bad” one in this story, someone the narrator needs to stay away from, but reading closely reveals the narrator’s flaws as well.

He uses Aurora for sex even though he knows she is troubled and possibly ill (and might even steal from him). He is too self-interested to understand when she is trying to tell him that she had been pregnant and either miscarried or had an abortion. Finally, he is violent with her.

Aurora has faced additional hardships because of her gender and the narrator seems totally oblivious to that.