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,
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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
In the Joy Luck Club, the author Amy Tan, focuses on mother-daughter relationships. She examines the lives of four women who emigrated from China, and the lives of four of their American-born daughters. The mothers: Suyuan Woo, An-Mei Hsu, Lindo Jong, and Ying-Ying St. Clair had all experienced some life-changing horror before coming to America, and this has forever tainted their perspective on how they want their children raised. The four daughters: Waverly, Lena, Rose, and Jing-Mei are all Americans. Even though they absorb some of the traditions of Chinese culture they are raised in America and American ideals and values. This inability to communicate and the clash
To begin with, The Joy Luck Club centers its content around the lives of eight women of Chinese heritage each with their own stories to tell; yet, all striving to satisfy their aspirations in America. A concisive cross is common between the mothers’ hopes compared to those of the American born daughters. Immigrating to America for various reasons, the four mothers all had one goal in mind, to not only construct themselves a better life, but also ensure the finest future for their daughters. For the mothers in the Joy Luck Club, the American dream was to instill Chinese history, heritage, and habit in their daughters while providing American opportunities of growth, gratification, and gallantry. Carrying heavy pasts, the four original American Joy Luck Club members arrived in The United States to start anew, “America was where
When a woman steps into motherhood, her whole world changes in a blink of an eye. A mother is an individual who is willing to nurture a new born child, losing plenty hours of sleep. A mother holds the patience to deal with toddler two’s all the way through the rebellious teenage years. Being a mother takes strength, will, and sacrifice. In the novel “The Joy Luck Club”, Amy Tan conveys the detailed stories of four Chinese women who have immigrated from China to America in order to live a better life.
Another conflict that arises from Confucianism is when Jing-mei was told to go back to China and tell her half-sisters about their mother. She said “‘what will I say? What can I tell them about my mother? I don’t know anything.’” (Tan 31). In Confucianism, very little of tradition is explicitly told from mothers to daughters in the form of text. Ritual actions are supposed to be observed, absorbed and understood in order to be preserved and handed down for posterity. But Jing-mei, who grew up in America, did not have a sense of following the tradition her mother brought to America, or rather considered the Chinese tradition to be eccentric.
Traditions, heritage and culture are three of the most important aspects of Chinese culture. Passed down from mother to daughter, these traditions are expected to carry on for years to come. In Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club, daughters Waverly, Lena, Rose and June thoughts about their culture are congested by Americanization while on their quests towards self-actualization. Each daughter struggles to find balance between Chinese heritage and American values through marriage and professional careers.
In The Joy Luck Club, Amy Tan introduces both the connection and the gap between mothers and daughters, and the hardships Chinese American immigrants face. By illustrating the sacrifices that the mothers made and the struggles the daughters endured, Amy suggests that the young generation do not understand the stories and desires of their mothers, nor do the mothers understand their daughters. In the stories, the young generation even perceives their mothers’ language inability and cultural difference as a shameful feature. Hence, Amy intended to let mothers and daughters appreciate and embrace each other. The intended audience for this novel is probably mothers and daughters of all age since the novel includes some common conflicts
Amy Tan's immensely popular novel, The Joy Luck Club explores the issues faced by first and second generation Chinese immigrants, particularly mothers and daughters. Although Tan's book is a work of fiction, many of the struggles it describes are echoed in Maxine Hong Kingston's autobiographical work, The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts. The pairs of mothers and daughters in both of these books find themselves separated along both cultural and generational lines. Among the barriers that must be overcome are those of language, beliefs and customs, and geographic loyalty. The gulf between these women is sadly acknowledged by Ying-ying St. Clair when she says of
Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club is a novel that deals with many controversial issues. These issues unfold in her stories about four Chinese mothers and their American raised daughters. The novel begins with the mothers talking about their own childhood’s and the relationship that they had with their mothers. Then it focuses on the daughters and how they were raised, then to the daughters current lives, and finally back to the mothers who finish their stories. Tan uses these mother-daughter relationships to describe conflicts of history, culture, and identity and how each of these themes are intertwined with one another through the mothers and
However, once Jing-mei stepped off the plane and saw her sisters, she was able to embrace them with "all hesitations and expectations forgotten"(331). The rapport between Jing-mei and her sisters demonstrates the capability of Jing-mei to forget her fears and have faith that she can do anything. Both Suyuan and Jing-mei worked through their problems by remaining strong and willful, making their lives much easier in the end.
Communication between generations has always been an issue and with that, a misunderstanding of the past and culture comes along. In Amy Tan’s novel The Joy Luck Club, she shows the stories of four Chinese mothers and their American born daughters. Throughout the novel, the characters encounter both external and internal conflicts in order to contrast the different relationships held by the mothers and daughters with their past and where they came from. The mother-daughter pair of Lindo and Waverly Jong shows the gap between the generations very clearly. Everything is different, from language to name to marriage.
She illustrated about the multicultural society that she lived and the intersection of the cultural heritage. In her popular novel “The Joy Luck Club”, she characterized her life experience as a child who grew up in multiple cultures and the problems that appear in the relation between an immigrant mother and her American daughter. Her main purpose of writing this New York Times- bestselling novel was to drag people’s attention towards the relationship between Chinese mothers and their American daughters. Her longing goal was to understand the culture of her society and to preserve it through the literary works. Her first novel, “The Joy Luck Club” addresses the contrast that existed between the old and new generations people based on her own experience.
The Joy Luck Club is Amy Tan's first novel. It consists of four sections with sixteen short stories. One of the main issues of the novel is the relationship between Chinese mothers and their Chinese – American daughters. ‘‘Your mother is in your bones.’’ (Tan 1998, 30) There is a cultural chasm between them because of the difference in the way they were brought up and different influences of the environment.
Amy Tan’s novel , The Joy Luck Club,explores the relationships and experiences of four Chinese mothers and their four ChineseAmerican daughters. The difference in raising of those mothers born during the first quarter of this century in China, rather than their daughters, who were born in California is undeniable different but similar at the same time. Unfortunately, that is the main concern throughout the entire novel, the mothers and daughters coming to an understanding that they are are no more than mere images of themselves. Each of the stories of the mothers and daughters clearly depicts this struggle.
Amy Tan, who wants to understand and figure out her own affiliation between her another mother, wrote The Joy Luck Club. This book explains and uses words to show the differences between the daughters and their mothers by putting in the Chinese culture and the western culture in the article. The Joy Luck Club has four different sections. And they all have common backgrounds but have different meanings behind them.
The complexitities of any mother-daughter relationship go much deeper then just their physical features that resemble one another. In Amy Tan’s novel The Joy Luck Club, the stories of eight Chinese women are told. Together this group of women forms four sets of mother and daughter pairs. The trials and triumphs, similarities and differences, of each relationship with their daughter are described, exposing the inner makings of four perfectly matched pairs. Three generations of the Hsu family illustrate how both characteristics and