62 pages • 2 hours read
Isabel AllendeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Content Warning: This section includes outdated racial descriptors quoted from the source text.
“‘Dance, dance, Zarité, the slave who dances is free…while he is dancing,’ he told me. I have always danced.”
The novel traces Tété’s search for freedom in a social and political sense. Paradoxically, this early passage quoting her friend and mentor, Honoré, suggests that she was always free in some sense, as exemplified in her love of dance. Freedom of movement and spontaneity of expression, which are intrinsic to Tété’s kind of dancing, symbolize the freedom she longs for and experiences only in fragments throughout much of her life.
“Usually Violette did not notice slaves—with the exception of Loula, she thought of them as merchandise—but that little creature evoked her sympathy. They were alike in some ways. […] Violette intuited her strength of character.”
Violette takes notice of Tété because she sees some of herself in the young girl. Although Violette is not concerned about slavery in general at this point, this passage demonstrates that empathy with those who are enslaved, rather than the dehumanization common at the time, leads her to act in what she views as Tété’s best interest. Of course, Violette’s view of what is best for Tété is skewed by the normalization of slavery.
“This is how I remember it.”
Throughout the novel, Tété’s chapters are stylistically distinct, as they are both italicized and written in first person, perhaps suggesting that they are a scripted record of oral recollections. Many of these chapters end with this exact statement or one like it, reminding readers that Tété is describing events through the imperfect lens of memory.
By Isabel Allende
A Long Petal of the Sea
Isabel Allende
And of Clay Are We Created
Isabel Allende
City of the Beasts
Isabel Allende
Daughter Of Fortune
Isabel Allende
Eva Luna
Isabel Allende, Transl. Margaret Sayers Peden
In the Midst of Winter
Isabel Allende
Maya's Notebook: A Novel
Isabel Allende
Of Love and Shadows
Isabel Allende
Paula
Isabel Allende
Portrait in Sepia
Isabel Allende
Ripper
Isabel Allende
The House of the Spirits
Isabel Allende
The Japanese Lover
Isabel Allende
The Stories of Eva Luna
Isabel Allende
The Wind Knows My Name
Isabel Allende
Two Words
Isabel Allende
Violeta
Isabel Allende
Zorro
Isabel Allende
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection