Joy Luck Club Essay

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    Joy Luck Club Culture

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    Question #1 The novel argues that certain cultural concepts like ‘Joy Luck Club’ cannot be translated, and still sustain their meaning in different cultures. According to June Woo, one of the biggest barriers between the mothers and their daughter's is the language. The language barrier is also enhanced by cultural differences between the mothers and daughters making translations very difficult. The daughters have returned from America, but their long stay in a foreign country has eroded their native

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    Joy Luck Club Culture

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    While watching the movie, The Joy Luck Club, I learned three elements of Chinese culture. Culture is the main theme of The Joy Luck Club, as the protagonists, four Chinese mothers, lives along with their American daughters plays out in front of us. Throughout the film the mothers and daughters have conflict because they different views on culture. The mothers want to teach their daughters Chinese culture but fail since the American culture has already got to them. The first important cultural element

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    motivated Jing-mei’s mother to create the Joy Luck Club in China and again in America? Suyuan Woo originally created the Joy Luck Club in Kweilin, China during the time when the Japanese were bombing Chinese cities. The Joy Luck Club was a club where a group of four women could enjoy themselves in the middle of a sorrowful time by playing mahjong with each other. They would host a party every week and make dyansyin food, which was supposed to bring luck. They would bet their money and play mahjong

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    Divorce is something no one wants to go through in their lifetime. Unfortunately, for many of the daughters in The Joy Luck Club, they face this issue head on. One of the daughters, Rose Hsu, goes through a divorce with her estranged husband Ted Jordan. A main issue Rose faces throughout her divorce is responsibility. In the article, 10 Ways Divorce Can Change Your Life for The Better, Lisa Arends explains, “One of the first areas you have to assume responsibility for is your own well-being.” Rose

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    Paragraph 2 of page 9 fits well into The Joy Luck Club. During this passage, Jing-Mei Woo tells the story about why her mother, who passed away, moved to America. “So you can see how quickly Kweilin lost its beauty for me. I no longer climbed the peaks to say, How lovely are these hills! I only wondered which hills the Japanese had reached. I sat in the dark corners of my house with a baby under each arm, waiting with nervous feet and scurried to the deep caves to hide like wild animals. But you

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    Joy Luck Club Sociology

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    Chinese Americans make up a vast population of individuals who make the United States home each year. The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tran brings to light the struggles of Chinese American women who came to the country as first generation immigrants. The reason I chose this movie is because it was my mother’s favorite movie and it deals with many sociological issues. Summary: The Joy Luck Club centers around eight individual women who are all of Chinese decent. Four of the women are mothers and the latter

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    stories, and within those themes are patterns; constantly repeating throughout the work. Throughout the novel, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, the use of themes and repeating patterns are seen through four different families. Some of the most prominent themes or patterns are family, specifically mother-daughter relationships, women and femininity, and growth in characters. The Joy Luck Club revolves around the idea of family; specifically focusing on mother-daughter relationships. Each mother-daughter

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    Joy Luck Club Identity

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    Identities depict the humane side we behold. Distinctiveness can be defined greatly through our beliefs and traditions, no one is an exception, especially in The Joy Luck Club. The women in The Joy Luck Club obtain and construct their identities through family traditions and ethnic heritage which altered their mindsets to many doors of experiences and opportunities. Traditions play an immense role in all of the mothers. It is what carries and exemplifies the mother’s attentiveness with their

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    There are several themes in the book, “The Joy Luck Club” by Amy Tan. I am going to talk about a couple of them. The first one I would like to talk about is immigration. Immigration in the book is from the perspective of a Chinese family coming to America to look for a better life. Their old life in Kweilin was going really bad, “But the worst were the northern peasants who emptied their noses into their hands and pushed people around and gave everybody their dirty diseases.” They, like the family

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    The differences between the novel and movie version of Amy Tan’s famous work, The Joy Luck Club, are subtle. Nevertheless, the ways that the movie used to express the story did allow The Joy Luck Club to relate more to the audiences’ life. The level of success of both the novel and movie, however, still mainly depends on personal preference. Effective setting is one of the major successes. The story takes place in two main settings, one is in San Francisco Bay area, the other one is located in China

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