"
Thus, although she is not aware as such of her position in society, she realizes however that the house they moved to does not correspond to what her family had been dreaming about. The small and crammed house offers almost as little space as the other places they lived in. When describing the small house, the author introduces the single metaphor in the speech of the child narrator, saying that the windows were so small that one would think "they're holding their breath":
But the house on Mango Street it's not the way they told it at all. it's small and red with tight steps in front and windows so small you'd think they were holding their breath."
The metaphor is very significant as it highlights the main theme of the story: the interplay between the personal space and the space of the others, or the relation between the self and society. Owning a house as such is not sufficient, since identity and the personal space the family wanted to reserve have had almost nothing to gain. The windows of the house can't "breathe" because they lack the space-this metaphor renders almost a claustrophobic feeling of the self that is suffocated by the world around its, by the otherness, and by the social system that entraps it ascribing it another identity than the one desired. This is why the house on Mango Street is not the house the girl wished for, since the space one has to oneself is still limited.
The way the space of the others or the social space intrudes on the personal one is made clear by the little girl in her current repetitions about the way in which everyone has to share everything. The house, for example has no yard, instead in front there are the elms that the city planted- therefore foreign elements-, the house has only one bathroom that they all have to share, just as they shared them with the neighbors in the other places, and the bedrooms need to be shared too:
There is no front yard, only four little elms the city planted by the curb. [...] Everybody has to share a bedroom- Mama and Papa, Carlos and Kiki, me and Nenny. "
The...
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