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
The Joy Luck Club is the first novel by Amy Tan, published in 1989. The Joy Luck Club is about a group of Chinese women that share family stories while they play Mahjong. When the founder of the club, Suyuan Woo, died, her daughter June replaced her place in the meetings. In her first meeting, she finds out that her lost twin sisters were alive in China. Before the death of Suyuan, the other members of the club located the address of June’s half-sisters. After that, they send June to tell her half-sisters about her mother’s life. In our lives there are events, and situations that mark our existence and somehow determine our life. In this novel, it shows how four mothers and their daughters were impacted by their tradition and beliefs. In the traditional Asian family, parents define the law and the children are expected to follow their requests and demands; respect for one’s parents and elders is critically important. Traditions are very important because they allow us to remember the beliefs that marked a whole culture.
Many women find that their mothers have the greatest influence on their lives and the way their strengths and weaknesses come together. In Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club, the lives of four Chinese mothers and their Chinese-American daughters are followed through vignettes about their upbringings and interactions. One of the mothers, An-Mei Hsu, grows up away from her mother who has become the 4th wife of a rich man; An-Mei is forced to live with her grandmother once her mother is banned from the house, but eventually reunites and goes to live in the man’s house with her mother. Her daughter, Rose, has married an American man, Ted, but their marriage begins to end as he files for divorce; Rose becomes depressed and unsure what to do, despite
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, 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.
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
Throughout The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan, Ying-ying St. Clair struggles with many different obstacles such as learning to become meek and passive and moving from China to the United States without much of a choice. She never gets much of a chance to become accustomed to the traditions that America has. She eventually has a daughter named Lena, who grew up used to the “American” lifestyle. Since they were surrounded by different cultures and traditions throughout their lives, Ying-ying can not bond and have a close relationship with Lena.
The commonly known phrase “like mother, like daughter” holds very true with all the pairs of mothers and daughters in The Joy Luck Club. Rose posses important characteristics that were passed on by her mother, An-mei. Uniquely with this couple, the trait can also be traced back to An-mei’s mother. All three of these women have difficulty
In the novel The Joy Luck Club written by Amy Tan, there are several stories that intertwine into one novel. Each of the stories takes place China where the roles and the actions of woman are vastly different compared to American tradition. In the different stories, they all are about different mothers and daughters. Throughout the book, the reader can see the development in each relationship between mother and daughter with their conflicting backgrounds from China to America.
The article, the book, and I, talk about how daughters feel their mothers don’t know them and that they don’t know their mothers. They talk about how a daughter listens to her mother, but there is a certain point in a young woman 's mind where they decide they want to see and explore new ideas. In conclusion, they all talk about the point in a daughter 's life where she and her mother don’t get along very well and the daughter tries to take charge of her life.
Lindo was arranged to marry Tyan-yu. While the marriage was short-lived, Tyan-yu constantly lied to Lindo, and Tyan-yu’s mother treated Lindo like an object to be bartered between families. Lindo experiences depression being trapped in this lifestyle, so she decides to flee to America in order to escape it. When reminiscing on her marriage Lindo says, “I had no choice, now or later. That was how backward families in the country were. We were always the last to give up stupid old-fashioned customs” (Tan ). Similar to the mother in the beginning, Tan creates appeal to pathos, forcing the reader to sympathize with Lindo. The reader’s sympathy to Lindo allows Tan to expand on the larger issue of sexism, creating an emotional and educational tone in order to coax the reader into, again, understanding the true scale of sexism. Tan drilling this larger idea of sexism into readers changes the reader’s perspective. With new perspective, readers notice the need for change to establish equality between both sexes. Therefore, Tan is using her writing as a tool for a deeper subject: exciting change within the world, and thus, exemplifying Jong’s words.
The relationship a mother has with her daughter is one of the most significant relationships either person will possess. In Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club, the stories of four mothers and their respective daughters are established through vignettes, which reveal the relationships between them. Throughout the novel, the mothers and daughters are revealed to be similar, yet different. Lindo and Waverly Jong can be compared and contrasted through their upbringings, marriages, and personalities.
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
The novel The Joy Luck Club written by Amy Tan influences American culture by providing a glimpse inside the culture of Asian American women with a focus on the honor, obligations, and restrictions imposed. These glimpses allow Americans to understand the history and behavior of Asian Americans, which in my opinion teaches how to overcome, believe in yourself and furthermore, respect and support one another regardless of differences. When I consider additional artifacts that have a similar impact the novel, Wonder by R.J. Palacio comes to mind. This particular novel brings to light the struggles of a child with developmental differences and raises awareness to bullying and the emotions endured by the child and his family. The novels share
Question #1 The novel argues that certain cultural concepts like ‘Joy Luck Club’ cannot be translated, and still sustain their meaning in different cultures. According to June Woo, one of the biggest barriers between the mothers and their daughter's is the language. The language barrier is also enhanced by cultural differences between the mothers and daughters making translations very difficult. The daughters have returned from America, but their long stay in a foreign country has eroded their native language to an extent that they can only speak a few Chinese words.
In the movie “The Joy Luck Club”, we learn about the pasts, conflicts, and resolutions of four mothers and four daughters. The mothers lived and grew up in China, while their daughters grew up in America and live in San Francisco with their mothers. It begins with a party celebrating June going to china to see her twin older sisters. She tells about her deceased mother always having high hopes for her and how she believed her mother abandoned her twin sisters as babies, leaving them to die. As the movie goes along it talks about the mother's pasts and their daughter's struggles.