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The Joy Luck Club Cultural Analysis

Decent Essays

The values and cultures that individuals are exposed to throughout their lives, carve them into who they are destined to be. They teach consistency and order over time and allow individuals to see the world through a different lens. In the novel The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan, the author uses the importance of heritage, articulated through her deliberate language and word choice, to present the idea that values are formed through customs and could be tied to a hopeful future. This is shown in the relationships between respective immigrant mothers and Americanized daughters: Suyuan and Jing-Mei Wu, Lindo and Waverly Jong, An-Mei and Rose Hsu Jordan, Ying Ying and Lena St. Clair. The mothers all come from a traditional life in China that leads …show more content…

The relationships between the mothers and daughters all derive from the differences between moral values; the daughters being laced with American ideals, and the mothers being of strict Asian descent. One of the daughters, Rose Hsu Jordan, struggles with inferiority in her marriage and realizes the significant problems in the relationship with her husband. She was reliant, subservient and never took charge. Ted, her husband, sends her way the papers that would soon end their marriage and Rose shuts down––her emotions falter and her ambitions subside. She is unaware of the decision she should consider and whether she should sign the papers that would change her life, but Rose soon realizes the toxicity of her marriage. “Lately I have been feeling hulihudu. And everything around me seemed to be heimongmong. I suppose the closest in meaning would be "confused" and "dark fog”. Maybe they can't be easily translated because they refer to a sensation that only Chinese people have, as if you were falling headfirst through Old Mr. Chou's… door, then trying to find your way back... listening for voices to tell you which way to go” (Tan 210). Rose considers that the feeling she has is unlike one that is American. She realizes that her confusion is something that is helping her to claw her way out of the dream she kept tumbling into––the one with Mr. Chou. She recognizes that the religious and cultural beliefs she possesses is one that allows her to pursue a hopeful recollection of her life, so she can fix her future, with or without the previous dependency she placed on her husband. She chooses the path of self-reliance to have an outlook on life based on her own efforts, not her husband’s. This accentuates the idea that hope is engrained in the beliefs that the characters hold because of their culture. Moreover, this idea is also portrayed in the

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