The House on Mango Street Group

Question:

beachbabe0191
beachbabe0191
Student
High School - 10th Grade

Why are the chapters so short in "The House on Mango Street"?

Rate question:

Posted by beachbabe0191 on Tuesday April 14, 2009 at 8:13 PM and tagged with chapters, short, structure, style, the house on mango street.


Answers:

  1. mbomengen
    mrsmonica Teacher
    High School - 12th Grade

    eNotes Editor

    It's difficult to explain exactly why the chapters are so short. Yound adult novels sometimes have short chapters to make them more readable. The book is clearly not a typical novel or even a novella. While not a diary, the stories are narrated by Esperanza. The eNotes discussion of style of this book is the best explanation I've found:

    Just like Esperanza, whose identity isn't easy to define, critics have had difficulty classifying The House on Mango Street. Is it a collection of short stories? A novel? Essays? Autobiography? Poetry? Prose poems? The book is composed of very short, loosely organized vignettes. Each stands as a whole in and of itself, but collectively the stories culminate in a mounting progression that creates an underlying coherence; the setting remains constant, and the same characters reappear throughout the tales. Cisneros once explained: "I wanted to write stories that were a cross between poetry and fiction—I wanted to write a collection which could be read at any random point without having any knowledge of what came before or after." Despite the disjunctive nature of the stories, as they evolve, Esperanza undergoes a maturation process, and she emerges at the end showing a more courageous and forthright facade.

    Rate answer:

    Posted by mrsmonica on Wednesday April 15, 2009 at 7:28 AM