Summary: The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao

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The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is a fictional story loosely based on the experiences of author Junot Diaz, a Dominican American. The novel follows the relationships of the main character, Oscar, the narrator, Yunior, and the women surrounding them with sex, family, and trauma. Diaz’s novel has been praised as groundbreaking and is the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize. However, the allegations made against Diaz regarding misogyny suggest that Diaz instead may be regressive in his treatment of women both in real life and within the novel by failing to understand and productively tell their stories, compared to those of men, through crude descriptors focusing on female bodies. Additionally, Diaz’s well-crafted male characters fail to take accountability …show more content…

Two seconds later she’d be kneeling on the tile of her kitchen in only an apron, while he remained fully clothed” (265). Considering Diaz’s indication that all men should be taught consent and boundaries, he fails to do so in his own writing, depicting all of his female characters, even those that Oscar is not attracted to, as a means of sexual fulfillment through disturbing fantasies that are an immense violation of female characters like Nataly (Silman). As the main characters, Oscar and Yunior’s inability to genuinely befriend a woman without repeatedly describing their innate sexual value prevents these female characters from being regarded multi-dimensionally, which is exhausting and disappointing for the reader who is exposed only to the descriptions of these female bodies. An interesting pattern to note is Yunior’s detailed descriptions of only the bodies of Latina women; despite his objectifying Suriyan, a former girlfriend who was not Latina, as an object for sex when he says, “[I] went out and put a cuerno in her that very night,” Yunior does not describe the features of her body or that of an Indian girl he was with

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