40 pages 1 hour read

Jimmy Santiago Baca

A Place to Stand

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 2001

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.

Prologue

Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Prologue Summary

The prologue opens with Jimmy Baca’s first encounter with prison, when he is five years old. He reveals that his mother takes him to the prison where his father Damacio Baca is being held. Baca vividly recalls the fear he felt at the sight of men crumpled in heaps inside the darkened cells.

Baca’s father reprimands his mother for bringing the boy to the prison, but despite his fear, Baca longs to stay with his father. Cecilia Baca, Jimmy’s mother, refuses to bail his father out of prison. This confinement, Baca reveals, is just one of the many times his father has been imprisoned for drunkenness or violence.

Conditions at home are difficult with Damacio Baca in prison, and the Baca children begin to sense that they may be moving soon.

Jimmy Baca says that he returns to this memory repeatedly because, as an adult, he would repeat the pattern of near continual imprisonment that he saw in his father’s life.

Baca explains that after his own incarceration, he came to feel more comfortable in prison than in the free world, where he felt alienated and inferior. Often feared because of his dark skin in a white society, Baca noticed the way others clutched their belongings in his presence.

Related Titles

By Jimmy Santiago Baca

Study Guide

logo

I Am Offering This Poem

Jimmy Santiago Baca

I Am Offering This Poem

Jimmy Santiago Baca

Study Guide

logo

Immigrants in Our Own Land

Jimmy Santiago Baca

Immigrants in Our Own Land

Jimmy Santiago Baca

Study Guide

logo

Who Understands Me but Me

Jimmy Santiago Baca

Who Understands Me but Me

Jimmy Santiago Baca