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Analysis Of The Joy Luck Club

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Whether it is wholesome or tough love, the bond of a mother and daughter can never be broken. “The Joy Luck Club” is the epitome of this notion. The anthology contains a series of sixteen vignettes, four of which belonging to one of each of the four members of The Joy Luck Club. These vignettes cover the perspectives of mothers who immigrated to America from China, along with the flip side point of view, taken over by each of their daughters. In the anthology, Tan reflects on her past life and incorporates it into the book, exploring cultural, relationship, and internal conflicts.
The first chapter of “The Joy Luck Club” is named after one mother, Suyuan Woo. The reader is introduced to Jing-Mei, her daughter, struggling to replace her mother in her spot at the mahjong table, as she died two months prior. In 1949, Suyuan Woo and her husband, Canning, left for America in effort for a better life-- two years before the birth of Jing-Mei. There, she joined a Chinese baptist church where she met the other core members of The (rendition of) Joy Luck Club: the Hsus, the Jongs, and the St. Clairs. Suyuan and Jing-Mei Woo, despite how well they get along, run into many conflicts, mostly regarding their differences in culture. Suyuan grew up in China, where she had gone through several complications and dire situations, which as a result forced her to succumb to extreme sacrifices-- one of which being the abandonment of her own twins. On the other hand, Jing-Mei was born in America,

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