Argument in Manual Munoz’s “Leave Your Name at the Border"
Texts.
“How to Tame A Wild Tongue” by Gloria Anzaldua
“Leave Your Name at the Border” by Manuel Munoz
“Invisibility Is An Unnatural Disaster: Reflections of An Asian-American Woman” by Mitsuye Yamad
Requirements
This essay will be approximately 2 pages. Create a properly formatted works cited page, and correctly use in-text citations.
Writing Task
Our textbook states in Chapter 5, “Once we’ve assessed the quality of another person's argument, there is an opportunity to take our reflection a step further.” For this midterm, you will be doing just that. Pick one text from this unit, and write a response that takes the author’s argument a step further. Some strategies for crafting a response include:
Add to the sense of urgency about the argument with our own explanation for why it matters.
Recommend ways to draw attention to the issue.
Suggest that the argument has implications even beyond what the writer discusses.
Remove limitations on the argument to make a broader claim.
Argue that the argument's claim points us toward a particular course of action.
Call for clarification, more support or inquiry, or a middle ground on the topic.
Tips
Use quotes correctly
Even though you are stating your opinion, do not use first person.
Suggested Outline
Introduction.
A good thesis will craft a clear response to the author’s argument and present a rationale for your response. You may use the template below:
[Author] argues/clarifies/points out [author’s argument], and/but/so [your response] because [rationale].
EXAMPLE: Mitsuye Yamada points out that silence is extremely harmful for minorities, and this argument must be addressed in schools today because discrimination runs rampant.
Body #1: Summarize the author’s argument in detail
Body #2: Create your response that takes their point a step further ( you may use an outside source).
Conclusion.
Manual Munoz’s “Leave Your Name at the Border
Author’s Name
Institutional Affiliation
Course Code and Name
Professor’s Name
Date
Manual Munoz’s “Leave Your Name at the Border”
“Leave Your Name at the Border” by Manuel Munoz depicts how Mexicans should not mind how the whites pronounce their names since it is part of assimilating to the American culture. The author starts by saying that he was eager to see whether the gate agent at Fresno airport was Mexican based on how she pronounced a name (Munoz, 2007). In California, the self-identifications of Hispanic, Latino, Chicano, and Mexican-American are not much considered by other communities. Munoz argues that Mexicans change their names to English versions or allow the whites to pronounce them the way they want to assimilate into the American way of life and this argument depicts the problems of self-identifications encountered by many immigrants in the United States (US).
Based on how the gate agent pronounced a name, Munoz had to confirm whether she was Mexican or not. In most cases, the whites have an English way of pronouncing Mexican names. The majority of Mexicans residing in the US had to adopt an English version of their names so that the white people could pronounce them correctly. For example, Mexicans’ names, such