Breydi-angelina Sims
Gelling
English 11A, PD
01-23-23
Laura Esquivel and her [beautiful, powerful] depiction of Desire’s impact on love
Like water for chocolate is arranged in a monthly chronological order that takes you on a sad, exciting, and immersive ride. This book is accompanied by wonderful recipes that the author uses to greatly express tones and imagery that make you feel like you are Tita, from prep to cooking and then situations in her life that come after these wondrous meals, from her sister marrying her boyfriend to her angry and rude mother abusing her power. The novel Like Water For Chocolate, by Laura Esquivel focuses on the life of Tita and her struggles, from birth to years later all in the midst of a war, Tita loses a
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Esquivel depicts a sensual moment as what true love to Tita felt like, in order to allow the reader to get an understanding of Tita and Pedro’s relationship(filled with the desire for one another) which keeps it going and fuels the love between them.
The depiction of Pedro and Tita’s sensual moment helps to give insight into the mind and what he had been longing for, which expresses a powerful ideal that desire can greatly impact love, and here it is seen to make it stronger(as he acted out on those desires) and that their love was in a way built on the longing for each other’s
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The discovery of a new “communication” technique for the longing “couple” is captured in a very sensual way to show the lengths love can make you go, “With that meal, it seemed they had discovered a new system of communication, in which Tita was the transmitter, Pedro the receiver, and poor Gertrudis the medium, the conducting body through which the singular sexual message was passed”(52). Hyperbole is an exaggeration of speech, describing or saying something you have done, will do, or has happened that is not meant to be taken in a literal sense. Esquivel uses the literary device to describe a sensual moment between her and the person she loves, Pedro, to describe the lengths they have gone to continue a forbidden relationship. Their new way of communication through food is powerful as it shows the lengths they will go to get to each other, but also as it gets you to think about their love and how the desire to partake in something they have not yet experienced with each other is causing them to go through these lengths to experience love. Esquivel uses the scene of a wedding to depict the extreme wanting and longing of love and desire and its effects, “The moment they took their first bite of the cake, everyone was flooded with a great longing”(39). Esquivel uses this literary device in order to depict the intense and rather quick feeling everyone at the wedding felt as soon as they ate