LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Bless Me, Ultima, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Growing Up
Punishment and Forgiveness
Knowledge
Language and Culture
Christianity vs. the Supernatural
Summary
Analysis
The war finally ends and everyone is excited. María hears that her sons are returning and she cries and prays to the Virgin for hours, until all the children eventually fall asleep.
María only processes the world through her specific religious framework, but it is still centered around the Virgin, a figure representing the Chicano blend of cultures.
Active
Themes
Antonio dreams of his brothers as giants, and they tell him about the wide world they have seen, and mention the golden carp, and ask Antonio to save them. He wakes up sweating and then sees that his brothers are coming over the hill in real life.
The giant brothers symbolize Antonio's ideas of adulthood, but their frailty in the dream shakes his ideals. Antonio is again asked to save someone, taking up a priestly role.
Active
Themes
Andrew, León, and Eugene return and the whole family is overjoyed. María starts crying again and makes them all pray one more time. Gabriel asks the boys about California, and repeats that he wants to go there with them soon. They are reticent about both California and the war. The house feels complete with everyone home. Meanwhile at school Antonio keeps learning his letters, and Miss Maestas sends a note home about his good progress, which pleases María.
The war brings harsh external modernity to the family through the change in the Márez brothers. They have seen many places and had terrible experiences, and can no longer process the world through their parents' narrow dreams. Antonio begins to fulfill his promise as a man of learning.