Esquivel, Laura - Rosa Fernández-Levin (essay date Fall 1996)
Rosa Fernández-Levin (essay date Fall 1996)
SOURCE: “Ritual and ‘Sacred Space’ in Laura Esquivel's Like Water for Chocolate,” in Confluencia: Revista Hispánica de Cultura y Literatura, Vol. 12, No. 1, Fall, 1996, pp. 106–20.
[In the following essay, Fernández-Levin analyzes the metaphors and symbolism found in Like Water for Chocolate and how Tita, the novel's protagonist, transforms the drudgery of the kitchen into a magical experience.]
Laura Esquivel’s novel Like Water for Chocolate resonates with metaphors that cannot be extricated from Mexican culture, its social conventions and myths. The novel allows readers to follow the metamorphosis of the protagonist, a young Mexican woman named Tita, who undergoes a prodigious transformation in an uncommon space, a kitchen. The kitchen and the recipes the protagonist concocts act as a symbolic and linguistic narrative catalyst that not only enables the...
[The entire page is 7260 words long]
