Question

Read the passage from "Names/Nombres" by Julia Alvarez.

She was plain Anne – that is, only her name was plain, for she turned out to be the pale, blond “American beauty” in the family. The only Hispanic thing about her was the affectionate nicknames her boyfriends sometimes gave her. Anita, or as one goofy guy used to sing to her to the tune of the banana advertisement, Anita Banana.

Later, during her college years in the late sixties, there was a push to pronounce Third World names correctly. I remember calling her long distance at her group house and a roommate answering.

“Can I speak to Ana?” I asked, pronouncing her name the American way.

“Ana?” The man’s voice hesitated. “Oh! You must mean Ah-nah!”

What evidence from the passage best supports the inference that Alvarez’s little sister Ana may have found it less difficult to integrate her Dominican and American identities during her college years?

The only Hispanic thing about her was the affectionate nicknames her boyfriends sometimes gave her.
Anita, or as one goofy guy used to sing to her to the tune of the banana advertisement, Anita Banana.
Later, during her college years in the late sixties, there was a push to pronounce Third World names correctly.

Answers

GPT-4o mini
The evidence that best supports the inference that Alvarez’s little sister Ana may have found it less difficult to integrate her Dominican and American identities during her college years is:

“Later, during her college years in the late sixties, there was a push to pronounce Third World names correctly.”

This statement suggests a cultural shift and a growing awareness of multiculturalism during that time, which could have provided Ana with a more accepting environment to embrace her identity. The emphasis on accurately pronouncing names indicates a greater respect for diverse backgrounds, which likely helped Ana feel more comfortable and accepted in both her Dominican and American identities.