Joy Luck Club Essay

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    for people, imagine moving to a whole new country, where people speak a different language, different culture and different lifestyle, it will take us years to blend in the new environment, some people won’t blend in forever. In the novel The Joy Luck Club generation gap is a big problem between four mothers and daughters. The author Amy Tan herself is a first generation Chinese American, she was born in Oakland, California, her parents emigrated from China to America two years before she was born

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    daughters. Such as the daughters and mothers in the book, The Joy Luck Club. For starters, a young girl named June and her mother Suyuan Woo were both alike in one common idea that they had completely different views on everything even in speaking as she states, “ these kinds of explanations made me feel my mother and I spoke two different languages, which we did. I talked to her in english, she answered back in chinese.”(Joy Luck, Tan,34) In saying this June tells metaphorically that they don’t

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    In the novel The Joy Luck Club written by Amy Tan, we are shown the struggles between a mother and her daughter. The mother was raised within the Chinese culture while the narrator grows up in the culture of America. Because of the two very different cultures, the narrator and her mother have many disagreements throughout the book. The tension is due to the language barrier that the two face – The mother unable to fully understand the English language while the daughter fails to understand the mother’s

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    The women in "The Joy Luck Club" were under strict rules, but always maintained a good composure for their family. They were harsh on their children to give them a set future. They sacrifice everything in order to raise children without any suffering. With the strict Chinese structure and traditions, women in the Asian family are often the guides for their children by giving them expectations but are looked down upon in comparison to men. Women in an Asian family has the role of the mentor for

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    The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan looks into mother-daughter relationships. Four pairs of daughter-mothers relationships are considered whereby the mothers were born in China but migrated to America where they bore their daughters. The daughters are Americanized and tend to identify more with the American culture at the expense of their Chinese culture. Suyuan Woo experiences much difficulty in trying to explain to her daughter June or Jing-mei certain cultures of the Chinese such as Confucianism, death

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    The Joy Luck Club Entry 1 When Jing-mei’s mother was living in Kweilin with her two baby girls, an army officer came to her house, telling her to go quickly to her husband in Chungking. Her friend bribed a man to steal a wheelbarrow and promised to warn her other friends that Kweilin was no longer safe. Suyuan packed all of her things into the wheelbarrow and began to push towards Chungking. When the wheel broke, she tied her babies across her body in scarves. She then took one bag of food and one

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    Throughout the book Joy Luck Club, the reader can see that the daughters are very americanized due to their mothers never teaching them enough Chinese heritage. The four daughters names are Jing-mei Woo, Rose Hsu Jordan, Waverly Jong, and Lena St. Clair. Jing-mei starts off the book by explaining what Joy Luck Club means and she found out that there is no direct translation, Jing-mei and the rest of the daughters think that their mothers are stupid because of their mothers’ horrible English. Language

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    The Joy Luck Club Theme Analysis The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan is an entertaining book that focuses on four Chinese American immigrant families. They face problems in their hometown which causes them to move to the United States. They end up moving to San Francisco and face many different problems with their cultural background. The theme of The Joy Luck Club is the relationship between both the mothers and their daughters. A variety of different events occur throughout the book that explains

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    “Two Kinds” Strengths, Weaknesses, and More... After exploring the contradictions in the lives of the Joy Luck Club, such as strength and weaknesses, obedience and independence, individuality and society, joy and sadness, and hope and despair. It really got me thinking about my strengths and weaknesses as a person (and where they came from). Obviously, people's strengths and weaknesses are subjective, so during the course of this writing session I will either use my own personal opinion of what

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    In her 1989 novel, The Joy Luck Club, Amy Tan hones into the narratives of four Chinese American immigrant families living in San Francisco. The novel is structured into four distinct, anecdotal sections: two dedicated to mothers and two dedicated to daughters. Tan’s approach to structure allows the interlocking stories between mother and daughter to place emphasis on the issue of sexism. The purpose of Tan’s novel is to highlight that, even though American and Chinese societies drastically differ

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