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Page 1: Welcome

Welcome

Today: Like Water for Chocolate

• Common elements of Latin American literature

• Images of women• Mexican artist Frida

Kahlo

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Common elements of Latin American literature

• Realism• Historical fiction• Lives of ordinary people• Family sagas (Gertrudis p. 59)• Concern with social/political reform • Folklore (La llarona p. 68)• Latin cultural traditions• Magical realism

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Motif

• A recurring object, concept, or structure in a work of literature. Ex: Using food to convey emotion

• A motif may also be two contrasting elements in a work, such as good and evil, heat & fire, etc.

• A motif is important because it allows the reader to see themes that the author is trying to express, so that they may interpret the work more accurately.

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Common literary characteristics for Latin American literature

• Use of foreshadowing (p. 58)

• Use of symbolism (quail p. 49)

• Metaphor/simile (last chili… p. 57-8)

• Locate these examples and see if you can find one more of each! Add them in your notes!

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Symbols in Literature and Art

• How are symbols used in Like Water for Chocolate?

• What are some of the symbols we’ve seen in the novel?

• What do they generally represent?

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Frida Kahlo was born Magdalena Carmen Frieda

Kahlo y Calderon on July 6, 1907, in her parents' house

in Coyoacan, Mexico a suburb of

Mexico City.

Self-Portrait in a Velvet Dress

1926

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1907-1954

• Active in social, economical, and political changes in Mexico

• Mexican Pride

• Both Mexican and European bloodlines added scrutiny to her national identity: compelled her work forward.

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Suffering and Art• “Her finest recipes date from this

period of suffering. Just as a poet plays with words…” (Esquivel 69).

• "I've done my paintings well, not quickly but patiently, and they have a message of pain in them.” – Frida Kahlo

• "I am not sick…I am broken... but I am happy to be alive as long as I can paint.... ”- F.K.

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• As you look at Frida Kahlo’s paintings, notice how she chooses to represent women. – (remember she lived and created art during and after

the Mexican Revolution).

• You will be choosing one of Frida Kahlo’s pictures to focus on for a comparison we will be doing in class today, so think about which one you might choose. – How does Kahlo represent women in this particular

picture? – What colors, or symbols, or gestures, or facial

expressions does she use to emphasize this woman? Jot down some notes.

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Self-Portrait on the Borderline Between Mexico and the United States, 1932

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My Dress Hangs There, 1933

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My Grandparents, My Parents and I (Family Tree), 1936

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Portraits of Women by Frida Kahlo

Portrait of My Sister Cristina

1928

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Portrait of Eva Frederick

1931

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Roots (Raices)

1943

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Portrait of Dona Rosita

Morillo

1944

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The Two Fridas

1939

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Self-Portrait with Necklace

1933

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Self-Portrait (Dedicated to Leon Trotsky)

1937

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• How is Kahlo using symbols in her art?

• What do the symbols generally represent?

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Self-Portrait

1940

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Self-Portrait with Necklace

1933

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Self-Portrait

1940

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Self-Portrait with Loose Hair

1947

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The Love Embrace of the Universe, the

Earth (Mexico), Me, and Senor

Xolotl1949

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• Choose one of Frida Kahlo’s pictures to focus on. – How does Kahlo represent women in this particular picture? – What colors, or symbols, or gestures, or facial expressions…

does she use to emphasize/illustrate this woman? Jot down some notes.

• Compare and contrast your chosen Kahlo picture with one of characters represented in Like Water for Chocolate. – How does Kahlo show her women/woman differently than

Esquivel does? – How are the two women the same/different? – How can you account for these similarities/differences?

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Homework

• Read “May” and “June” and “July” in Like Water for Chocolate- expect a quiz


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