The House of the Spirits

by

Isabel Allende

Ana Díaz Character Analysis

A student activist at Alba’s university. Alba first meets Ana during the university protest, in which student activists barricade themselves inside a building in support of striking workers, and Alba notices immediately that Ana has the same tiny insignia of a raised fist embroidered on her sleeve as Miguel. Ana, like Miguel, supports socialist ideologies and advocates for class warfare and equality, and she initially gives Alba a hard time for her high social standing and wealth. When Alba is struck with incapacitating menstrual cramps during the protest, Ana implies that Alba is weak because she is a member of the bourgeoisie. True proletarian (working-class) women, Ana says, don’t even complain during childbirth. Later, after Alba is detained, tortured, and raped during the military coup d’état, she again meets Ana Díaz in a concentration camp for women. Like Alba, Ana is raped and tortured inside the camp, but they find strength in each other, and Ana and Alba resist the violence and abuse of the camp when they are together. Ana gives Alba the notebook that Alba uses to record the experience of her confinement, and it sparks Alba’s interest in writing and helps her to heal. The character of Ana Díaz is an example of a strong woman within the novel, and her support of Alba underscores the solidarity of women, even in the face of perceived differences.

Ana Díaz Quotes in The House of the Spirits

The The House of the Spirits quotes below are all either spoken by Ana Díaz or refer to Ana Díaz. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Class, Politics, and Corruption Theme Icon
).
Epilogue Quotes

“If you want, I’ll tell you my story so you can write it down,” one said. Then they laughed and made jokes, arguing that everybody’s story was the same and that it would be better to write love stories because everyone likes them. They also forced me to eat. They divided up the servings with the strictest sense of justice, each according to her need; they gave me a little more because they said I was just skin and bones and not even the most desperate man would ever look at me. I shuddered, but Ana Diaz reminded me that I was not the only woman who had been raped, and that, along with many other things, it was something I had to forget. The women spent the whole day singing at the top of their lungs. The guards would pound on the wall.

“Shut up, whores!”

“Make us if you can, bastards! Let’s see if you dare!” And they sang even stronger but the guards did not come in, for they had learned that there is no way to avoid the unavoidable.

Related Characters: Alba de Satigny (speaker), Ana Díaz
Page Number: 474
Explanation and Analysis:
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Ana Díaz Quotes in The House of the Spirits

The The House of the Spirits quotes below are all either spoken by Ana Díaz or refer to Ana Díaz. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Class, Politics, and Corruption Theme Icon
).
Epilogue Quotes

“If you want, I’ll tell you my story so you can write it down,” one said. Then they laughed and made jokes, arguing that everybody’s story was the same and that it would be better to write love stories because everyone likes them. They also forced me to eat. They divided up the servings with the strictest sense of justice, each according to her need; they gave me a little more because they said I was just skin and bones and not even the most desperate man would ever look at me. I shuddered, but Ana Diaz reminded me that I was not the only woman who had been raped, and that, along with many other things, it was something I had to forget. The women spent the whole day singing at the top of their lungs. The guards would pound on the wall.

“Shut up, whores!”

“Make us if you can, bastards! Let’s see if you dare!” And they sang even stronger but the guards did not come in, for they had learned that there is no way to avoid the unavoidable.

Related Characters: Alba de Satigny (speaker), Ana Díaz
Page Number: 474
Explanation and Analysis: