North Seattle Community College
Beginnings, Fall 2010

Seminar Assignment #5: Due Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Assignment: Read Dreaming in Cuban, by Cristina Garcia pp. Contents-101

A. Preliminary thinking: Use these first two questions as reading prep before and as you read the text:

1.  Have you ever thought about an absent person, perhaps someone far away or even someone who has died, as if he or she could hear you? Have you ever felt as if you knew what such a person would say or do about a situation in your own life? What connects people across distance in your experience? Across time?

2.  Have you ever felt that formal education lacked some things you need to know? What sources do you have for filling these gaps? What have you learned on your own that is important? Would you try to teach it to someone else, a friend, or a child?

B. As you read this novel: Reflect and connect with the themes from our class: culture, identity, family, presence, differences, and conflict.

C. Thinking and Writing Assignment: Answer one of the questions below, in PIE format. You should answer your question using two paragraphs of PIE to back up your assertions.

Question Choices:

1. Pilar Puente is dissatisfied with the things she learns in school. She asks, “Who chooses what we should know or what is important?” And she adds, “Most of what I’ve learned that’s important I’ve learned on my own, or from my grandmother” (28).
Question: What are some ways that people in this book represent the important things people learn on their own or from a close family member?

2. This book also raises issues of conflict between generations. When Lourdes complains that “[no] matter what I do, Pilar hates me”(74). Her dead father, with whom she has an ongoing conversation, reassures her, saying that Pilar doesn’t hate her mother; “She just hasn’t learned to love you yet” (74).
Question: How does this conversation show how two generations in a family develop conflicts and seek healing as they develop a more adult perspective?

3. What is the importance of the sections containing Celia’s letters? In a letter dated February 11, 1949, Celia remarks that, reading the plays of Moliere, she has been wondering “what separates suffering from imagination” (101).

Question: Which characters in this novel represent this statement and analyze why?

4. Different characters believe in different powers. The pious Felicia “remembers how when she was in grammar school the paraphernalia of faith had proved more intriguing than its overwrought lessons.” Celia, who is not a believer, is “wary of powers she didn’t understand” (76).
Question: Analyze and talk about other powers that are feared, sought out, or invoked by the characters in the novel?

SEMINAR RUBRIC FOR EVALUATION OF SEMINAR PAPERS:

After completing your seminar paper, take ten or fifteen minutes to review your paper. Does it meet the criteria below?

CONTENT AND IDEAS: ______15 POINTS

·  Answering a question with PIE (Point/Illustration/Example) paragraphs

·  Making statements that analyze and illustrate with direct quotations or close paraphrases how the text answers the questions

·  Providing explanations and explications of the question or ideas

·  Including evidence of understanding what the text says, what it means, and why it is important.

VOICE/REFLECTION/RESPONSE: ______5 POINTS

·  Reflection/writer’s reader response to the text

·  Experience of reading and connections to the themes of our class: COMMUNICATION ACROSS CULTURES/IDENTITY/FAMILY/MEMORY/PRESENCE/DIFFERENCES/CONFLICT

FORMAT/ EDITING/ PROOFREADING: ______5 POINTS

·  Following Assignment Directions

·  Using MLA in-text citation correctly

·  Editing and proofreading

[23-25= Check +] [20-22= Check] [17-19=Check -] BELOW 17=NOT PASSING