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B1 Intermediate English 9:32 1,594 words Educational

The Hidden Politics of Home: Crash Course Latin American Literature #8

CrashCourse · 19,559 views · Added 2 months ago

AI Summary

This Crash Course episode explores how houses function as literary symbols in Latin American literature, examining works by Sandra Cisneros, Isabel Allende, and Camila Sosa Villada. Learners will encounter rich vocabulary related to literary analysis, identity, politics, and cultural themes. The engaging narration style helps practice listening skills while building knowledge of literary terms like 'metaphor,' 'symbolism,' and 'magical realism.'

Learning Stats

B1

CEFR Level

1,594

Total Words

663

Unique Words

5/10

Difficulty

Vocabulary Diversity 42%

Subtitles (36 segments)

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00:00

What makes a house a home? For me, it's photos of my ancestors, anything to do with La Gualupe, and of course, food.

00:06

Busas, mano, yukafita. But I go off topic. Houses can be more than just a place to decorate, sleep, and eat your mom's and bananas. Hi, I'm Krilly Velasquez, and this is Crash Course Latin American literature.

00:19

[music]

00:23

A person's home can tell you a lot about them. Their art, their knickknacks, the way they arrange the furniture. It can all give you hints about their innermost self. So, it makes sense that in literature, where characters live can be key to who they are. But not only that, houses in Latin American literature are portals into diverse identities, cultures, and even political conflicts.

00:45

The trick is knowing how to read them that way. Let's look at Sandra Cisneros's 1984 novel, The House on Mango Street. It tells the story of a 12-year-old Esparanza Cordiero and her family in a working-class Chicago neighborhood. Having grown up in an apartment, Espiranza is thrilled to put down her roots in her family's new home.

01:05

I knew then I had to have a house, she says. A real house, one I could point to. But her family's dilapidated house is not the vibe. And also, it's not really about the house. Or at least not only. See, Esparanza's discomfort in her house mirrors her discomfort with her own identity. Like Cisnerto herself, Espiranza Chicana, which means she comes from a Mexican family but was born in the US.

01:33

So her identity exists somewhere between the two places and cultures. She

01:36

tells us at school they say my name funny as if the syllables were made out of tin and hurt the roof of your mouth.

Full subtitles available in the video player

Key Vocabulary (12)

you A1 pronoun

Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.

music A1 noun

Music consists of sounds that are arranged in a way that is pleasant or exciting to listen to. It is an uncountable noun used to describe songs, melodies, or instrumental pieces performed by voices or instruments.

house A1 noun

building to live in

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