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Summary Of Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club

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In one of Amy Tan's best-selling novels, The Joy Luck Club, is a story that was written in 1989 explaining the lives of eight Chinese immigrant mothers and their American-born daughters. The story is divided into four chapters, each one having a different scenario. Constantly rejecting criticism from their mothers about everything they choose, the daughters only see their mother's warnings as irrelevant and intrusive. Little do they know that it was the hardships their mothers suffered in China before coming to America. From the motherly perspective, their daughters are only thrashing in their modern American circumstances. Not only does this story explain about the complicated relationships between the characters, but it portrays how the mothers and daughters respond and react based on their own ideals based on their own interpretations of society and expectations.
In the first section, Feathers From A Thousand Li Away, Jing-Mei is also a Chinese-American daughter who was born and raised in contemporary San Fransisco, California while her mother, aunt and father grew up in China. About to play a game of Mahjong, in the text the aunt of Jing-Mei asks: "Do you win like your mother?" Asks Auntie Lin across from me. She is not smiling. "I only played a little in college with some Jewish friends. Annh! Jewish mah jong." She says in disgusted tones. "Not the same thing." This is what my mother used to say, although she could never explain exactly why. I could not tell by

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