Transformation
America is ever changing. Over the centuries it has transformed in many ways. There has been an increase in immigrants, especially Hispanics, which has caused a transformation of both language and culture. Richard Rodriguez in his book Brown: The Last Discovery of America, and in other essays has brought his views on these matters and presents brown as a new way of describing America. Brown as color; as impurity; as language; as America.
Richard Rodriguez is a writer who is artistic, and has an idealistic way of recounting things. In his essay "Late Victorians" he writes how a woman jumps off the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. He describes it as "
before she stepped onto the sky. To land like a spilled purse at my feet," (Encounters, 496) He compares the woman hitting the ground as a "spilled purse." When you think of a spilled purse you don't think of tragedy, so his comparing this insignificant incident of a purse hitting the ground to the death of a woman catches you off guard. Rodriquez says it in such a tranquil manner that the tragedy seems to be unrealistic. He again shows romanticism somewhere else in the essay:
On a Sunday in summer, ten years ago, I was walking home from the Latin mass at Saint Patrick's, the old Irish parish downtown, when I saw thousands of people on Market Street. It was San Francisco's Gay Freedom Day parade-not marching backs. There were floats. Banners blocked single lives thematically into a processional mass, not unlike the consortiums of the blessed in Renaissance painting, each saint cherishing the apparatus of his martyrdom. (493)
Rodriguez's comparing the parade with religious allusions makes it more glorious. He compares the parade of floats and banners to a "processional mass." He satirically portrays gays as saints just as he is coming from church, which considers homosexuality as a sin. He is basically beautifying the parade. He romanticizes to capture your attention and to bring you...
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