“The man who had been my mother’s
husband” (page 3), this is quite an interesting sentence. Juan pretty much
removes himself from even being closely related to Pedro Pἁramo. By doing this
he renounces his father and everything that he has to do with him. It has to do
with the fact that Pedro Pἁramo kicked
out Juan’s mother before he was born and the fact that he has never seen his
father and vice versa. This is also the case when Juan’s mother says “make him
pay, son, for all those years he put us out of his mind” (page 3). As well Juan
says later in this chapter “I began to build a world around a hope centered on
the man called Pedro Pᾲramo” (page 3). The author uses great diction,
foreshadowing, and irony in this sentence. In reality the town of Comala was
actually centered around the world of Pedro Pἁramo everything he did affected
the town. This is especially the case when he got Father Renterἰa to forgive
the sins of his son which forever doomed the town of Comala into an eternity in
purgatory. He did this by making Father Renterἰa commit a terrible sin (forgiving
a rapist and murderer) and therefore making him unable to forgive the town’s
sins.
ReplyDelete"The author uses great diction, foreshadowing, and irony in this sentence" instead of pointing this out, discuss the significance of these literary devices.