Like Water For Chocolate Mama Elena Character Analysis

Words: 558
Pages: 3

In the book, Like Water for Chocolate, by Laura Esquivel , the author expresses how Tita’s Mother, Mama Elena, is very traditional. For instance, Mama Elena is very entrenched in following the recipes that are being passed down from her grandmother. Furthermore, not only is she conventionally with the kitchen, but also with her daughters. Mama Elena is making Tita follow the family tradition of devoting her life to Mama Elena because she is the youngest; meaning Tita is not able to choose her own path. One of the strongest traditions in the family is not allowing the youngest daughter to get married. As the mother is talking to Tita, she also mentions Pedro: “If he intends to ask for your hand, tell him not to bother. He’ll be wasting …show more content…
Since Tita is the youngest, it means that she has to spend all her days into bathing and cleaning for her mother. Having to do this difficult task also means that Tita would never be able to have children or marry anybody. Her life consists of doing anything and everything for her mother. Mama Elena never even took her daughter’s feelings into consideration, especially when she made Pedro marry Rosaura even though Tita is in love with him, “If you really want Pedro to get married, allow me to suggest my daughter Rosaura, who’s just two years older than Tita. She is one hundred percent available, and ready for marriage.” Mama Elena didn’t want the two to even look at each other in any type of way she thought was romantic, and she even ended up having them move to Texas, just so she can be sure that Tita does not interfere with their fixed marriage she put together. Tita perfectly describes Mama Elena when she says, “Unquestionably, when it came to dividing, dismantling, dismembering, desolating, detaching, dispossessing, destroying, or dominating, Mama Elena was a pro.” - page 97. Mama Elena is a ruthless person that doesn't care about anybody.
In conclusion, Mama Elena is clearly a very traditional woman, and that leads to both poor and prosperous things in her occuring in her family’s life. Rosaura agrees about everything with her mother and it’s mostly because the tradition