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The House on Mango Street: Novel Summary: What Sally Said

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The House on Mango Street
Hairs
Boys & Girls
My Name
Cathy Queen of Cats
Our Good Day
Laughter
Gil's Furniture Bought & Sold
Meme Ortiz
Louie, His Cousin & His Other Cousin
Marin
Those Who Don't
There Was an Old Woman She Had So Many Children She Didn't Know What to Do
Alicia Who Sees Mice
Darius & the Clouds
And Some More
The Family of Little Feet
A Rice Sandwich
Chanclas
Hips
The First Job
Papa Who Wakes Up Tired in the Dark
 
Born Bad
Elenita, Cards, Palm, Water
Geraldo No Last Name
Edna's Ruthie
The Earl of Tennessee
Sire
Four Skinny Trees
No Speak English
Rafaela Who Drinks Coconut & Papaya Juice on Tuesdays
Sally
Minerva Writes Poems
Bums in the Attic
Beautiful & Cruel
A Smart Cookie
What Sally Said
The Monkey Garden
Red Clowns
Linoleum Roses
The Three Sisters
Alicia & I Talking on Edna's Steps
A House of My Own
Mango Says Goodbye Sometimes

What Sally Said

Summary
Esperanza's classmate Sally talks about how her father hits her, but "he never hits me hard." "But," Esperanza confides in us, "Sally doesn't tell about that time he hit her with his hands just like a dog, she said." One time, Sally was going to spend the night with Esperanza-but, just as Minerva's husbands pleaded with her, Sally's father comes to Esperanza's house, tearful and apologetic, and gets Sally to agree to come home. Things were better for a while, until Sally's father caught her talking to a boy-and "the way Sally tells it, he just went crazy, he just forgot he was her father between the buckle and the belt."
 
Analysis
Sally's public language is common among battered women: making excuses ("at school she'd say she fell"), rationalizing, even dismissing of the abuser's behavior. The private language to Esperanza, however, reveals the truth of Sally's situation. Readers may wonder if Sally's father abuses her sexually-note the comments about "he just forgot he was her father," in suggestive proximity to a reference to a belt buckle-but, whether or not incest is involved, physical battery certainly is, and that is crime enough. Like Minerva, Sally is trapped in a cycle of abuse. Readers cannot help but feel sympathy for Sally. They should also, however, given the themes of Cisneros' novel, reflect on the fact that the emphasis of the text in this vignette is on Sally's words, not on the abuse itself. Note again the heading: "What Sally Said." Here again, Cisneros is challenging her readers to consider the potential and the limits of language. One of the major themes of the novel, as we have repeatedly seen, is the liberating power of story. Does Sally's telling of her story to Esperanza liberate or empower her to any real degree? Each reader must ponder the question for him- or herself.

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