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ONLY DAUGHTER 
By SANDRA CISNEROS 
Std. IX English 
Unit II 
Chapter III 
www.english4keralasyllabus.com
Sandra Cisneros 
Born December 20, 1954 (age 57) 
Chicago, Illinois 
Occupation Novelist, poet, short story writer 
Nationality USA 
Ethnicity Mexican American 
Notable 
work(s) 
The House on Mango Street,Woman Hollering 
Creek and Other Stories 
Notable 
award(s) 
American Book Award, Clay McDaniel 
Fellowship
SPOT LIGHT ON 
• Sandra Cisneros (born December 20, 1954) is an 
American writer best known for her acclaimed first 
novel The House on Mango Tree (1984). She is the 
recipient of numerous awards including a National 
Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. Cisneros has 
held a variety of professional positions, working as a 
teacher, a counselor, a college recruiter, a poet-in-the- 
schools, and an arts administrator, and has 
maintained a strong commitment to community and 
literary causes. In 1998 she established the 
Macondo Foundation. 
• Cisneros currently resides in San 
Antonio, Texas.
Summary • 
• The Story is about a young girl, growing 
as the only daughter of six other brothers. 
When growing up, the father includes her 
as one of his “Siete Niños,” (Seven Boys). 
She grows up near with her six brothers, 
and learns a lot about each other. She 
wants her father to understand that she is 
important also, but the father diverts his 
attention to her brothers. Then when she 
is in the 5th grade, she shares her dreams 
to go to college, and do something with 
her life. Her brothers all laugh at her. Her 
father says while in college, she will 
find a husband there. … 
•
• The father’s judgment and the common stereotype states 
that Her destiny is to become a good “House Wife.” But 
after four years of college and some time at the 
undergraduate school, she still hasn't got a husband let 
alone a boyfriend. Her father says that she has wasted 
her education. She later says that she always was 
writing for her father, and writing for mainstream culture. 
• Ten years went by, and now she is now a professional 
writer creating works of art. Her father has developed an 
unwell sickness. She gives her father some of her own 
story to read in Spanish (Father’s native language), and 
he likes it a lot. At the end of reading, the father becomes 
very proud of her daughter.
Elements of the Story 
• Plot & Setting: Takes place 
Chicago, Illinois in the mid to the 
late 20th century, in a household 
of nine including six brothers and 
one sister 
• Crisis & Conflict: The girl trying to 
help her father believe that she is 
not a statistic of some common 
belief, or some stereotypical 
theory by becoming a renounced 
and professional author and writer
Types of conflict: 
• External Conflict (Self vs. 
Man) and Internal Conflict 
(Self and Society). 
• In this case, the external 
conflict is between the 
Daughter and the Father, 
and the internal conflict is 
between the Protagonist 
(Daughter) and the societal 
stereotype of a woman.
• Resolution: At the end of the short story, the 
Daughter proves to her father that she didn’t 
waste her education and used it for a good 
purpose. Her father is indeed proud of her. 
• Point of view: The narrator is telling the story in 
First person, using the words “I, me, my.” 
• The narrator also describes and tells the story 
like she was the story.
Character Analysis 
• The Protagonist (Daughter) is a very intelligent, 
independent, sophisticated, and very liberal young girl 
who wants to deserve her father’s respect and honor. 
• As being the only Daughter, she is the minority, and 
the irrelevant one in her siblings. 
• The way people judge her and her personality in the 
beginning of the story tends to represent the 
stereotypical idea of women in general. 
• She is a living example to those who beat the 
stereotype of the common “House Wife” and of those 
who challenged society’s thought
Theme 
Even if you feel 
unappreciated by society and 
even disregarded and 
rejected because you are the 
minority of the crowd, at the 
end, your true colors will shine 
and people will respect you 
for the person you truly are…
Read to understand 
• In a Mexican family, the sons are more useful 
than the daughters. They can get a job and 
provide for the family but the daughters are 
expected to stay home and cook and clean. 
• She was the only daughter, therefore she wasn't 
allowed to play with her brothers because they 
were too embarrassed to be seen playing with a 
girl. Being the only daughter left her to be by 
herself to think about things and start writing. 
• Because she could think and create things in her 
mind, she could write on paper to become a 
writer. He father expected her to go to college 
and find her husband.
• Because she was almost done with school and 
she had not found a husband. He thinks that 
college is for finding a husband not getting 
education. It allowed her to get her things done 
without her father bugging her about what she 
was doing. 
• Atlast after her book he asks her where they 
could get more copies to give to the rest of the 
family.
COMPREHENSION - 1 
As the only daughter in a family with six 
sons, Sandra Cisneros felt 
• very special and privileged. 
• lonely and of less importance than her 
brothers. 
• she had to be an English teacher. 
• she could never have friends over to her 
house
2 
Cisneros' father wanted his children to 
• become rich and famous. 
• avoid jobs that required physical labor. 
• avoid going to college. 
• become writers.
3 
For Cisneros' father, being an only 
daughter meant that Sandra's destiny 
was to become 
• an English teacher. 
• a wife. 
• an engineer. 
• a nun.
4 
Sandra Cisneros' father finally read one 
of her stories when 
• her mother insisted that he do so. 
• Sandra got a high-paying publishing job. 
• Sandra came home for Christmas with a 
Spanish translation. 
• he got tired of watching television.
5 
What did Sandra’s father say to indicate 
his pride in her work? 
• He apologized for not acknowledging her 
before. 
• He wanted copies for all the relatives. 
• He asked her to autograph her story for 
him. 
• He offered to finance her next book.
Group questions 
• 1) What upsets Cisneros about the 
relationship between her and her father? 
What kind of relationship, or reaction, does 
she want from her father? 
• 2) In paragraph 3, how does Cisneros’s 
distinction between “only daughter” and 
“only a daughter” reveal much of what 
concerns her?
Contd… 
• 3) What particular experience creates a 
significant improvement in this relationship? Why 
do you think this experience is so important not 
only to Cisneros but also to her father? 
• 4) What does the author mean when she says in 
paragraph 5 that “I’m lucky my father believed 
daughters were meant for husbands. It meant it 
didn’t matter if I majored in something silly like 
English” ? 
• 5) Do you think parents should make different 
plans and have different expectations for sons 
and daughters? Why or why not?

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ONLY DAUGHTER: How Sandra Cisneros' Writing Earned Her Father's Respect

  • 1. ONLY DAUGHTER By SANDRA CISNEROS Std. IX English Unit II Chapter III www.english4keralasyllabus.com
  • 2. Sandra Cisneros Born December 20, 1954 (age 57) Chicago, Illinois Occupation Novelist, poet, short story writer Nationality USA Ethnicity Mexican American Notable work(s) The House on Mango Street,Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories Notable award(s) American Book Award, Clay McDaniel Fellowship
  • 3. SPOT LIGHT ON • Sandra Cisneros (born December 20, 1954) is an American writer best known for her acclaimed first novel The House on Mango Tree (1984). She is the recipient of numerous awards including a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. Cisneros has held a variety of professional positions, working as a teacher, a counselor, a college recruiter, a poet-in-the- schools, and an arts administrator, and has maintained a strong commitment to community and literary causes. In 1998 she established the Macondo Foundation. • Cisneros currently resides in San Antonio, Texas.
  • 4.
  • 5. Summary • • The Story is about a young girl, growing as the only daughter of six other brothers. When growing up, the father includes her as one of his “Siete Niños,” (Seven Boys). She grows up near with her six brothers, and learns a lot about each other. She wants her father to understand that she is important also, but the father diverts his attention to her brothers. Then when she is in the 5th grade, she shares her dreams to go to college, and do something with her life. Her brothers all laugh at her. Her father says while in college, she will find a husband there. … •
  • 6. • The father’s judgment and the common stereotype states that Her destiny is to become a good “House Wife.” But after four years of college and some time at the undergraduate school, she still hasn't got a husband let alone a boyfriend. Her father says that she has wasted her education. She later says that she always was writing for her father, and writing for mainstream culture. • Ten years went by, and now she is now a professional writer creating works of art. Her father has developed an unwell sickness. She gives her father some of her own story to read in Spanish (Father’s native language), and he likes it a lot. At the end of reading, the father becomes very proud of her daughter.
  • 7. Elements of the Story • Plot & Setting: Takes place Chicago, Illinois in the mid to the late 20th century, in a household of nine including six brothers and one sister • Crisis & Conflict: The girl trying to help her father believe that she is not a statistic of some common belief, or some stereotypical theory by becoming a renounced and professional author and writer
  • 8. Types of conflict: • External Conflict (Self vs. Man) and Internal Conflict (Self and Society). • In this case, the external conflict is between the Daughter and the Father, and the internal conflict is between the Protagonist (Daughter) and the societal stereotype of a woman.
  • 9. • Resolution: At the end of the short story, the Daughter proves to her father that she didn’t waste her education and used it for a good purpose. Her father is indeed proud of her. • Point of view: The narrator is telling the story in First person, using the words “I, me, my.” • The narrator also describes and tells the story like she was the story.
  • 10. Character Analysis • The Protagonist (Daughter) is a very intelligent, independent, sophisticated, and very liberal young girl who wants to deserve her father’s respect and honor. • As being the only Daughter, she is the minority, and the irrelevant one in her siblings. • The way people judge her and her personality in the beginning of the story tends to represent the stereotypical idea of women in general. • She is a living example to those who beat the stereotype of the common “House Wife” and of those who challenged society’s thought
  • 11. Theme Even if you feel unappreciated by society and even disregarded and rejected because you are the minority of the crowd, at the end, your true colors will shine and people will respect you for the person you truly are…
  • 12. Read to understand • In a Mexican family, the sons are more useful than the daughters. They can get a job and provide for the family but the daughters are expected to stay home and cook and clean. • She was the only daughter, therefore she wasn't allowed to play with her brothers because they were too embarrassed to be seen playing with a girl. Being the only daughter left her to be by herself to think about things and start writing. • Because she could think and create things in her mind, she could write on paper to become a writer. He father expected her to go to college and find her husband.
  • 13. • Because she was almost done with school and she had not found a husband. He thinks that college is for finding a husband not getting education. It allowed her to get her things done without her father bugging her about what she was doing. • Atlast after her book he asks her where they could get more copies to give to the rest of the family.
  • 14. COMPREHENSION - 1 As the only daughter in a family with six sons, Sandra Cisneros felt • very special and privileged. • lonely and of less importance than her brothers. • she had to be an English teacher. • she could never have friends over to her house
  • 15. 2 Cisneros' father wanted his children to • become rich and famous. • avoid jobs that required physical labor. • avoid going to college. • become writers.
  • 16. 3 For Cisneros' father, being an only daughter meant that Sandra's destiny was to become • an English teacher. • a wife. • an engineer. • a nun.
  • 17. 4 Sandra Cisneros' father finally read one of her stories when • her mother insisted that he do so. • Sandra got a high-paying publishing job. • Sandra came home for Christmas with a Spanish translation. • he got tired of watching television.
  • 18. 5 What did Sandra’s father say to indicate his pride in her work? • He apologized for not acknowledging her before. • He wanted copies for all the relatives. • He asked her to autograph her story for him. • He offered to finance her next book.
  • 19. Group questions • 1) What upsets Cisneros about the relationship between her and her father? What kind of relationship, or reaction, does she want from her father? • 2) In paragraph 3, how does Cisneros’s distinction between “only daughter” and “only a daughter” reveal much of what concerns her?
  • 20. Contd… • 3) What particular experience creates a significant improvement in this relationship? Why do you think this experience is so important not only to Cisneros but also to her father? • 4) What does the author mean when she says in paragraph 5 that “I’m lucky my father believed daughters were meant for husbands. It meant it didn’t matter if I majored in something silly like English” ? • 5) Do you think parents should make different plans and have different expectations for sons and daughters? Why or why not?