Joy Luck Club Essay

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    Culture is more than just a practice done at home. It is meant to be a set of laws enforced upon a family to keep peace and harmony. Oddly, it can be a culprit that strains and ruins one’s relationship. In Amy Tan’s, Joy Luck Club, mothers are portrayed to be misunderstanding creatures who struggle to display their love to their daughters. Tan emphasizes the story of four newly-immigrated mothers who are at constant battle with their daughters due to the differing ways that they were raised. Throughout

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    In the novel, The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan, Lena was the main character in the chapter Rice Husband. Her mother Ying Ying was also a character in the chapter. Lena's mother, always predicts the future, but everything she predicts is negative.Ying-Ying looked around Lena's house for the first time and found flaw’s right away.When Lena was younger her mother told her if you don't finish your rice you will have a bad husband when you grow old. Ying-Ying knows that their is bad tension in Harold and

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    In the novel, The Joy Luck Club, the author, Amy Tan, employs various rhetorical devices at numerous points in the story to achieve a specific purpose, whether the aim is to expand a character’s development, to further the evolution of the plot, or to suggest a certain theme to the reader. In particular, one of the most common rhetorical devices exploited by Tan throughout the story is perhaps the anecdote, which forces the reader to analyze the hidden significance of it as its contents are much

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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 my

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    Merriam Webster’s dictionary defines sacrifice as “the act of giving up something that you want to keep especially in order to get or do something else or to help someone”. In Amy Tan’s novel, The Joy Luck Club, a central theme present throughout is sacrifice. This novel depicts the sacrifices made by a group of immigrant mothers in order for their daughters to have a better life in America. Although the daughters do not realize the reasons behind their mothers motives until their stories and personal

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    oppression based on gender has thrived in each corner of the globe. It can be manifested in a myriad of ways, including a simple derogatory statement or fundamental human rights being snatched from the sufferer. Amy Tan’s multicultural novel, The Joy Luck Club, explores various expressions of sexism and how its victims handle this atrocity. Ying-ying St. Clair as well as Lena St. Clair, Ying-ying’s daughter, both experience sexism, but are able to eventually overcome their respective conflicts. Ying-ying

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    Grace Pating Mr. Devine English 203H 8 September 2015 The Joy Luck Club: Breaking Barriers When people struggle to communicate with one another or disagree, the usual response is to ask questions and make an effort to fix the issue. Unfortunately, owning up to responsibility can be much more difficult when the argument is with a close friend or family member. Coming from two time periods, this is a prevalent issue for the women of the Woo family, especially since both individuals are intolerably

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    The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan is about four Chinese immigrant mothers and their four daughters, who were born and raised in America. The mothers, through their experiences in China, have attained vast knowledge that they now wish to pass on to their daughters. One mother, An-mei Hsu, wants to pass on her knowledge to her daughter, Rose Hsu Jordan. Rose is worried about her inevitable divorce with her husband, which was caused by her indecisiveness. An-mei hopes that by giving Rose advice, she can

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    The issue of gender inequality is a prominent motif in The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan. Throughout the plot, a majority of the female characters face pressure to conform to gender roles and expectations. Those around them, even close family members, expect and remind them to be submissive towards their husbands and to constantly serve their elders; often times, they are hypnotized into selflessness. While some manage to hold on to their identity, others are impacted in such a way that they lose their

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    In the book ¨The Joy luck Club” by Amy tan writes about her past and about her mother's past and how her mother wanted her to be better than the other girls. But that's how all parents were back then and would make their daughters compete with each other. The Joy Luck Club contains numerous lessons, lessons that mothers convey to their daughters, and lessons that daughters teach their mothers through the crucible of their vastly different life experiences. But what the american daughters do not know

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