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Introductory
Note to the Reader Wilbert Salgado, my scholar friend from
Chinandega, Nicaragua, is an emerging writer whose ars literaria
allows him to move comfortably between two languages, English and Spanish. I
first met Wilbert through a common acquaintance, but over the years our
relationship, what I half-jokingly call an academic friendship, has
grown steadily stronger. It may sound like a strange name for a friendship,
yet it accurately reflects how our bond has been shaped: through shared
readings, intellectual exchange, and a mutual fascination with how stories
reveal the ethical texture of everyday life. Over time, Wilbert has generously shared
his short stories with me, and whenever circumstances allow, I return to them
not simply as a reader, but as an analyst. I enjoy revisiting his texts to
discover what else they might be saying—both to me and to other readers, whether
encountered in English or Spanish. Each rereading opens new interpretive
possibilities, confirming that Salgado’s writing resists exhaustion. The short story Fare is no
exception. Brief yet dense, restrained yet emotionally resonant, it is a text
that rewards close attention. Though its narrative footprint is small, its
ethical reach is substantial. What follows is a critical reflection on this
seemingly simple story—short, but undeniably meaty. Prof.
Jonathan Acuña Solano |
Everyday Ethics and the Pedagogy of Kindness in Wilbert Salgado’s Fare
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Abstract This
essay analyzes Wilbert Salgado’s short story Fare as a literary
exploration of everyday ethics, dignity, and compassion within contemporary
urban life. Through a minimalist narrative centered on a moment of public
vulnerability, Salgado dramatizes the moral tensions that arise in ordinary
social interactions, particularly those shaped by economic precarity and
institutional pressure. Drawing on scholarship in ethics of care, narrative
empathy, micro-ethics, and modernity, this essay argues that Fare
presents compassion as a quiet but transformative ethical intervention. The
analysis highlights how small, anonymous acts of kindness disrupt the
dehumanizing logic of speed, efficiency, and transactional justice, offering
an alternative vision of fairness rooted in human solidarity. |
Keywords: Micro-Ethics,
Narrative Empathy, Ethics of Care, Dignity, Kindness, Contemporary Short Fiction,
Wilbert Salgado, Literary Analysis, Nicaraguan Literature |
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Resumen Este ensayo analiza el cuento Fare de Wilbert
Salgado como una exploración literaria de la ética cotidiana, la dignidad y
la compasión en la vida urbana contemporánea. A través de una narrativa
minimalista centrada en un momento de vulnerabilidad pública, Salgado
dramatiza las tensiones morales que emergen en interacciones sociales
ordinarias, especialmente aquellas atravesadas por la precariedad económica y
la presión institucional. A partir de aportes teóricos sobre ética del
cuidado, empatía narrativa, micro-ética y modernidad, el ensayo sostiene que Fare
presenta la compasión como una intervención ética silenciosa pero
transformadora. El análisis destaca cómo pequeños actos anónimos de bondad
interrumpen la lógica deshumanizante de la rapidez, la eficiencia y la
justicia transaccional, proponiendo una noción de equidad basada en la
solidaridad humana. |
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Resumo Este ensaio analisa o conto Fare, de Wilbert
Salgado, como uma exploração literária da ética cotidiana, da dignidade e da
compaixão na vida urbana contemporânea. Por meio de uma narrativa minimalista
centrada em um momento de vulnerabilidade pública, Salgado dramatiza as
tensões morais presentes em interações sociais comuns, especialmente aquelas
moldadas pela precariedade econômica e pela pressão institucional. Com base
em estudos sobre ética do cuidado, empatia narrativa, microética e
modernidade, o ensaio argumenta que Fare apresenta a compaixão como
uma intervenção ética silenciosa, porém transformadora. A análise evidencia
como pequenos atos anônimos de bondade interrompem a lógica desumanizante da
rapidez, da eficiência e da justiça transacional, propondo uma visão de equidade
fundamentada na solidariedade humana. |
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Introduction
Wilbert
Salgado’s short story Fare is a compact but powerful exploration of
dignity, kindness, and the moral tension embedded in the routines we encounter
in modern life. Through a straightforward narrative of a man who unexpectedly
lacks money to pay his bus fare, Salgado dramatizes the vulnerability that
often accompanies working-class existence and the redemptive potential of small
acts of compassion. Although minimalist in length, Fare offers fertile
ground for ethical analysis, particularly when read through the lens of
micro-ethics, narrative empathy, nonviolent communication, and contemporary
scholarship on interpersonal moral behavior. This essay (blog post #526) argues
that Salgado’s story reveals how ordinary situations create moral crossroads
and how compassion can function as an ethical intervention that reshapes the
self-understanding of individuals.
The Opening
The
story opens with an inventory of digital financial transactions: the narrator
pays his credit card, transfers his children’s allowance, covers tuition fees,
and sends grocery money to his ex-partner. This catalogue of economic
responsibilities situates the protagonist within the lived reality of
precarity, a condition that scholars have described as a “perpetual balancing
of obligations under unstable economic pressures” (Standing, 2014, p. 23). By
foregrounding these responsibilities, Salgado invites readers to understand
that the protagonist’s failure to have coins is not a product of carelessness
but rather an outcome of a life tightly bound to financial management and
emotional labor. The bus stop thus becomes the stage upon which everyday
pressures materialize into a moment of public shame and vulnerability.
Embarrassment
The
narrator’s embarrassment when he realizes he cannot pay the fare speaks to a
common emotional experience in urban life: the fear of appearing irresponsible
or dependent. Philosopher Martha Nussbaum (2001) argues that shame arises when
the individual’s perceived failure threatens the integrity of the self in the
eyes of others. Salgado illustrates this dynamic clearly: passengers shout
impatiently, the driver expresses irritation, and the protagonist feels heat
rise to his face. The bus becomes a microcosm of what Goffman (1959) calls
“face-work,” the effort individuals make to preserve dignity while navigating
social expectations. Salgado’s protagonist, who takes his obligations
seriously, is momentarily undone by a minor but emotionally charged lapse.
Micro-Ethic Event
The
turning point of the story, a woman quietly paying the fare for the narrator, functions
as what ethicists refer to as a “micro-ethic event,” a moment where small
gestures carry disproportionate moral weight (Fowers & Davidov, 2006). The
woman’s action is portrayed without sentimentality: she merely extends her
hand, deposits the coins, and returns to her spot without seeking recognition.
This understated gesture reflects what Held (2006) describes as “care ethics,”
in which moral value emerges not from grand ethical principles but from
relational attentiveness and practical responsiveness to another’s need. Her
anonymity reinforces the universality of the act; she symbolizes the
possibility of goodness in what the narrator experiences as an indifferent
crowd.
The Embroidered Blazon
A
crucial symbolic layer emerges when the narrator notices the embroidered blazon
on the woman’s shirt: the initials S.S.F., standing for Sympathy, Support, and
Fairness. The story’s title, Fare, already hints at wordplay, and this
symbolic motto amplifies it. “Fare” denotes the cost of transportation, yet the
narrative transforms it into a meditation on “fairness.” The woman’s gesture
clarifies that fairness is not merely transactional or procedural; instead, it
is a form of justice rooted in human solidarity. As philosopher Michael Sandel
(2009) argues, justice must account for compassion, not only rules and rights.
Salgado’s story aligns with this view, illustrating how fairness can exceed
institutional codes and manifest as interpersonal care. Fare in the bus
become “fair” in practical terms.
Liquid Modernity
The
narrative critiques the erosion of empathy in fast-paced environments. The
passengers’ impatience exemplifies what Bauman (2007) describes as “liquid
modernity,” a condition where speed and efficiency override interpersonal
consideration. The bus driver’s frustration, shaped by schedule constraints,
represents a system that privileges productivity over humanity. In contrast,
the woman with the blazon reintroduces a mode of ethical presence that disrupts
this impersonal rhythm. Her action becomes a form of moral resistance to the
culture of haste, to the culture that is indifferent to people’s predicaments
in life without knowing their backstories.
Salgado’s Dirty Realism
Salgado
also employs a minimalist narrative technique to support his thematic aims. The
prose is direct and unembellished, reflecting what Raymond Carver (1981)
identifies as the power of “dirty realism,” where the mundane becomes
meaningful through precise attention to detail. The emotional climax occurs not
through reflection but through silence: “I went mute. All I could do was nod my
thanks.” The narrator’s inability to speak underscores the transformative
quality of the kindness he receives. As literary theorist Suzanne Keen (2007)
observes, narrative empathy often arises from “moments where language reaches
its limit,” allowing readers to feel an emotional shift rather than merely
understand it intellectually.
An Ethical Insight
Ultimately,
the story culminates in an introspective realization: the narrator notes that
the blazon’s initials “didn’t feel like a school motto. It felt like a message
meant for me.” This personal appropriation of institutional values illustrates
how ethical insight often originates in lived experience rather than formal
instruction. The woman’s act becomes an ethical pedagogy, teaching the narrator
through example. As Paulo Freire (1998) emphasizes, moral education is
dialogical and rooted in human encounters; individuals learn ethical frameworks
not only from doctrine but from witnessing justice enacted in concrete
situations.
Conclusion
In
conclusion, Wilbert Salgado’s Fare is a narrative meditation on everyday
morality. It dramatizes the fragility of dignity, the callousness of impatient
crowds, and the restorative power of compassion. Through minimalist
storytelling, symbolism, and psychological realism, Salgado offers readers a
vivid ethical encounter. The story teaches that fairness, like kindness, is
often enacted in humble moments, through gestures that may seem small but
resonate deeply. In an increasingly impersonal world, Fare reminds us
that humanity survives through micro-ethics: in the coins we choose to give,
the shouts we choose not to utter, and the dignity we choose to extend toward
those who falter.
San José, Costa Rica
Monday, February 9, 2026
📚 References
Bauman, Z. (2007). Liquid times: Living in an age of
uncertainty. Polity Press.
Carver, R. (1981). What we talk about when we talk about
love. Knopf.
Fowers, B., & Davidov, B. (2006). The virtue of
multiculturalism: Personal transformation, character, and openness to the
other. American Psychologist, 61(6), 581–594.
Freire, P. (1998). Pedagogy of freedom: Ethics,
democracy, and civic courage. Rowman & Littlefield.
Goffman, E. (1959). The presentation of self in everyday
life. Doubleday.
Held, V. (2006). The ethics of care: Personal,
political, and global. Oxford University Press.
Keen, S. (2007). Empathy and the novel. Oxford
University Press.
Nussbaum, M. (2001). Upheavals of thought: The
intelligence of emotions. Cambridge University Press.
Sandel, M. (2009). Justice: What’s the right thing to
do? Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Standing, G. (2014). The precariat: The new dangerous
class. Bloomsbury.
Fare, Wilbert Salgado's short story
Fare [Short Story] by Jonathan Acuña
Comparative Chart of Themes in Wilbert Salgado's Fare
Comparative Chart of Themes in Wilbert Salgado by Jonathan Acuña
Reader’s Handout for Wilbert Salgado’s “Fare”
Reader’s Handout for Wilbert Salgado’s “Fare” by Jonathan Acuña
Everyday Ethics and the Pedagogy of Kindness in Wilbert Salgado's Fare by Jonathan Acuña
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