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Mother-Daughter Conflicts In Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club

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Introduction
The Joy Luck Club is Asian-American writer Amy Tan’s first book. It is based on Tan’s personal experience and many parts of the content are autobiographical. Growing up with Chinese culture at home, Tan had many problems with her own ethnicity, her parents’ Chinese background and the dominant American culture in which she was educated. After discovering her passion for literature, Tan wrote a short story “Endgame” about her struggle, which was the first version of the book The Joy Luck Club ( E.D.Huntley 1-18).
The Joy Luck Club is centered around the stories of four Chinese immigrant mothers --- Suyuan Woo, Lindo Jong, An-mei Hsu and Ying.ying St. Clair - and the conflicts and reconciliation they experience with their Americanized daughters - Jing-mei “June” Woo, Waverly Jong, …show more content…

With Jing-mei and Suyuan’s relationship in focus, it will argue that reconciliation can only happen by actively inhabiting another person’s perspective, which means that Jing-mei must not only to accept the Chinese part of her heritage by learning its meaning, but also to truly listens and understands her mother’s history, feelings and motivations. Through an on-going dialogue with her mother, she fixes her relationship with her mother and also heals her split identity. The analysis will be carried out in two sections. In the first section, the focus is to analyze the cultural conflicts and the language barrier between the mothers and daughters that are described in the novel. The second section will concentrate on the reconciliation between the mothers and daughters that they reach mutual understanding and peace in different ways. Jing-mei’s trip to China will be analyzed in details because Jing-mei is the only daughter in the novel that actually travels back to China from the

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