Los Vendidos Literary Elements

Los Vendidos Literary Elements

Genre

Chicano Play

Language

English and Spanish

Setting and Context

Honest Sancho's Used Mexican Lot, California, in the late 1960s

Narrator and Point of View

The point of view is that of the playwright; with no narrator as such, his beliefs and viewpoints are the ones the play is written from.

Tone and Mood

Bitter and ironic

Protagonist and Antagonist

The models of the stereotypical Mexicans are the protagonists whilst Mrs Jiminez in the antagonist.

Major Conflict

There is conflict between Mrs Jiminez and Sancho when he pronounces her last name with a Spanish accent and she chastises him and tells him he should pronounce it the Americanized way.

Climax

At the end of the play the models reveal that they are actually real human beings and that the only robot is Sancho, the store operator.

Foreshadowing

The fact that the Farm Worker speaks no English at all foreshadows Mrs Jiminez rejecting him.

Understatement

No specific examples.

Allusions

The playwright alludes to Governor Ronald Reagan who at the time was Governor of California, and who went on to become President of the United States.

Imagery

The images are all stereotypes, creating a picture of how Chicanos are believed to be.

Paradox

Mrs Jiminez is clearly a Mexican American but she does not want the robots who are overly Mexican, preferring the almost entirely Americanized option.

Parallelism

There is a parallel between each of the robot models presented to Mrs Jiminez and the stereotype that society portrays of Mexican Americans.

Personification

The robots themselves are personified and given the ability to make their own decisions.

Use of Dramatic Devices

No specific examples.

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