The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

by Junot Díaz

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How does Oscar's character evolve throughout the story?

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Oscar evolves from an awkward, overweight outcast struggling with depression and cultural expectations to a tragic hero in Junot Diaz's story. Initially unable to conform to Dominican machismo, Oscar retreats into writing fantasy. His quest for love leads him to believe he must die to end his family's curse. Ultimately, Oscar sacrifices himself, becoming a Christ-like figure whose death influences Yunior, the narrator, inspiring him to become the teacher and author Oscar aspired to be.

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According to Junot Diaz, every Dominican male should be physically attractive. He must have a machismo attitude and demonstrate considerable sexual prowess. Oscar’s character fails to live up to these standards. His subtle masculinity does not find favor with women. Disastrously overweight and unwilling to change, Oscar fails to engage in romantic relationships throughout the narrative, and is consistently displaced into the "friend zone."

Oscar's weight contributes to his low self-esteem and makes him vulnerable to depression. He struggles with mental health issues, self-destructive behavior, and suicide attempts. As Oscar matures, he becomes an introvert. He prefers to stay at home reading fantasy novels or writing science fiction stories. His inability to fit into the Latino culture alienates him from society.

As Oscar fails to achieve his life goals, he questions the cause of his misfortune. He attributes his bad luck to a family curse. At the end of...

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the novel, Oscar realizes that there is no escape. He decides to risk it all in the name of love. The tragic hero pays the price for his inability to conform to a set of expected ideals. He succumbs to a horrific death.

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In Junot Diaz's The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Oscar is a quester, first for women and then for love.  In between, he redefines himself and his quest as he learns more about himself, his family, and the fuku curse.

At first, young Oscar is a player, following what the machismo culture expects of males.  He juggles two girls at once, but after he gets rejected, he balloons up in weight and becomes a ghetto nerd.

His next quest is to become the next J.R.R. Tolkien, fantasy fiction writer extraordinaire.  His stories are good, but the better he gets at writing them, the fatter he gets.  And the fatter he gets, the further away from finding a girl (and love) he gets.

Oscar realizes he must die to end his family's curse.  So he returns to the D.R., where he meets a prostitute, falls in love, and gets so close to the fuku that it kills him.  He then becomes a kind of sacrificial hero (Christ-figure) whose death ends the curse and thus protects his sister and future generations from it.

His death influences the book's main narrator, Yunior.  So, even in death, Oscar becomes a teacher and mentor, an influence on his macho former-roommate.  Yunior ends up becoming what Oscar wanted all along, a teacher and an author of Oscar's book.  In this way, Oscar is Yunior's doppelganger, or ghostly twin.

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