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Bless Me, Ultima Rudolfo A. Anaya
Themes, Motifs & Symbols
Themes
Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas
explored in a literary work.
The Importance of Moral Independence
An emphasis on thinking independently about moral decisions
pervades Bless Me, Ultima. Antonio's progress toward
moral independence is the main marker of his maturity and development throughout
the novel. Antonio's struggle to reconcile the complexities of his
experience with his religion leads him to conclude that he must
make his own decisions. He becomes increasingly frustrated by the
failure of the church to explain the most pressing questions about
morality and human experience.
Ultima acts as Antonio's guide as he learns the importance
of moral independence. Ultima teaches him that the most difficult questions
about life can never be answered entirely by a single religion or
cultural tradition. Antonio has questions about evil, forgiveness,
truth, and the soul, questions he can answer only for himself. Antonio
once believed that the Communion ritual would answer all his questions,
but Ultima teaches him that he must think for himself and arrive
at his own conclusions.
The Influence of Culture on Identity
Bless Me, Ultima explores the difficulty
of reconciling conflicting cultural traditions. In the end, Anaya
suggests that a person can draw from several cultural traditions
to forge a more complex and adaptable identity. Antonio is so eager
to find a single, definitive answer to the questions that haunt
him because he has been influenced by many conflicting cultures.
The first major conflict involves his parents. His Luna mother wishes
for him to become a priest, while his vaquero father wishes for
him to ride the llano. Each parent has deeply rooted cultural convictions.
Next is the conflict within his town between its Spanish and indigenous
cultures. We see evidence of this conflict in the pronounced tension
between Ultima's mystical folklore and the Catholic church. Another
conflict takes place at Antonio's school between Spanish and English
speakers.
Anaya uses these conflicts to explore the influence of
culture on identity. Many characters in the book are limited by
their cultural prejudices and never learn to look beyond their own
assumptions. For example, the townspeople condemn Narciso for being
a drunk and refuse to acknowledge that his traumatic experience
in the war might play a part in his psychological state. Ultima
teaches Antonio to avoid the limitations inherent in abiding by
one culture, one religion, or one creed. Instead, Ultima encourages
Antonio to embrace all of the cultural influences in his life to
become a better person.
Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary
devices that can help to develop and inform the text's major themes.
Dreams
Antonio has a number of dreams throughout the novel, from
his early dream about watching his own birth to his later dreams
about his brothers calling for his help. Anaya uses the recurrent
dream motif to show how Antonio's interpretations of his thoughts
and experiences change as he develops as a character. In his early dreams,
for instance, Antonio is largely preoccupied with the question of
his destiny, of whether he will become a vaquero or a priest. But
in his later dreams, he is preoccupied with much larger questions
of family, morality, and duty. This gradual transformation, traced
in dreams, reflects Antonio's growth from childhood to maturity.
His dreams also offer him a rich and variable set of images and
symbols with which to understand his own life.
Family
The recurring presence of various family relationshipsuncles,
siblings, and parents, especiallyprovides a subtle commentary on
the nature of identity and ultimately underscores the book's main
theme of moral independence. Many of Antonio's family members seek
to define his future, especially his uncles, who argue about whether
he will become a priest or a vaquero. Antonio looks to
other members of his family to help define his identity, especially
when he tries to model himself after Andrew, his older brother.
In the end, Antonio must learn to make his own choices, drawing
from the wisdom and experience of his family, but not being limited
by their wishes and perspectives.
Learning and Education
Ultima once predicts vaguely that Antonio will be a man
of learning. Many scenes in the book explore Antonio's education,
both religious (his Communion classes) and academic (his school classes).
Antonio's growth and development serve as examples of education.
Ultima believes that every experience helps inform one's identity
and perspective on life. Bless Me, Ultima is the
story of Antonio's growth from childhood to maturity. His progress
is represented by his gradually expanding education, both in the
classroom and in his own introspective interpretation of his experience.
Tolerance and Understanding
Ultima represents the importance of tolerance and understanding. Though
she comes from an indigenous mystical tradition, she openly acknowledges
the value of the Catholic faith. She also encourages Antonio to
draw from the various conflicting sets of ideals that define his
outlook. Learning the importance of tolerance marks Antonio's growth,
especially as he begins to realize that some religions may be better
suited to some people than to others, as Florence is seemingly better
suited to the faith of the golden carp than to Catholicism.
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors
used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
The Golden Carp
The golden carp represents a magical religious order not
connected to Catholicism. The golden carp legend offers its own
brand of wisdom, comfort, and moral guidance. Within the context
of the novel's themes, the carp supports the idea that every religious
tradition offers different, but equally valid, lessons about the
world. Antonio first rejects the golden carp, feeling that he is
abandoning God by simply pursuing an interest in the magical fish.
He learns later that the carp can actually help in his endeavor
to draw from all the cultural and religious sources available to
him in crafting his own identity and finding his own answers.
Ultima's Owl
Ultima's owl represents her life force and the power of
her religious mysticism. The owl sings softly outside Antonio's
window at night. Its song symbolizes Ultima's comforting presence
in Antonio's life and the protective power of her magic. At the
end of the novel, Tenorio's killing of the owl literally destroys
Ultima's life force and leads very quickly to her death. Antonio
equates Ultima with the owlwhen he buries it, he says that he is
really burying Ultima.
The Virgin of Guadalupe
María's statue of the Virgin of Guadalupe symbolizes forgiveness, understanding,
and the resolution of cultural conflict. The story of the dark-skinned
Virgin represents the reconciliation of the European Catholic Church
with the indigenous culture of Antonio's homeland. Antonio turns
to the Virgin repeatedly when he is frustrated by his failure to
find a forgiving god.
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