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By making peculiar and exclamatory utterances of ‘Mexican Ghosts’, in reality, Moon Orchid alludes to how she has suffered being barely able to adjust to the western culture, particularly with the language that seems to have treated her with ample indifference. Since she becomes exposed to culture beyond the realms of her homeland and grows to have alienated emotions at the difficulty of communicating and understanding English, or at least one besides Chinese, Kingston’s aunt in the story finds herself pierced with rejection and compelled outside of sanity. Moon Orchid occurs to perceive ‘what she could not grasp’ as a ghost or something unreal as far as her own comprehension of sensibility by tradition counts. ‘Mexican Ghosts’ in her perspective embodies the bulk of cultural varieties in America in association with her unresolved weakness of dealing with personal assimilation.
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