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Like Water For Chocolate Summary

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The kitchen is a very important aspect of not only Like Water for Chocolate: A Novel in Monthly Installments, with Recipes, Romances, and Home Remedies , a novel published in 1989, but also the author, Laura Esquivel’s life. Growing up, the kitchen and cooking were very important aspects of Esquivel’s life. She therefore wrote the novel in a cookbook style in order to examine and emphasize the roles of women and gender identities throughout a time-period much earlier than when she was born, the Mexican Revolution. She connects the characters of her novel to important figures of the revolution and flips the roles of men and women to break the social order of what is seen as “normal” in Mexican society. Like Water for Chocolate readily portrays …show more content…

She was the 3rd of 4 children and grew up in what was considered a nice neighborhood. She worked as a kindergarten teacher where she wrote plays for her students and wrote children’s TV programs during the 1970s and 1980s. She, with the contribution of some friends, founded a children’s theater workshop. Esquivel published “Like Water for Chocolate” in 1989 and it was later translated to English in 1992. With the help of her husband, Alfonso Arau, the novel became an internationally recognized and awarded film and was nominated for a Golden Globe for best foreign film. Family greatly influenced her writing in this specific novel, as did her cooking with her grandmother. The kitchen becomes a main topic of the novel as it is written in the style of a cookbook. There are 12 chapters to represent “monthly installments” which are therefore labeled with the months of the year. Each chapter begins with a recipe and the main happenings of each chapter generally involve the preparation or consumption of the dishes that these recipes produce. The main character, Tita, eventually uses her cooking to reveal her control and …show more content…

This may be due to the emphasis the government placed on economic growth throughout her lifetime. There was a similar emphasis during the Mexican Revolution. The Mexican Revolution began in November of 1910 and there isn’t a universal agreement as to when the revolution ended or what ended it. The initial goal of the revolution was to overthrow General Porfirio Diaz who had been in power for more than 30 years. Diaz rose to power as what most would consider a liberal leader, but contradictory to the anticlericalism of most nineteenth-century liberals, he was very close with the Catholic Church and depended on wealthy elites to ensure his political survival. During his time in power, the economics of Mexico rose drastically changing the structure of Mexican classes, which caused uproar. The government policies in Mexico during the time when Esquivel was alive stressed industrial growth, just as Diaz did in his time in

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