At some point in life everyone startsa search to find themselves and their identity. It may take some time with wrong turns and different paths until there is an epiphany. Family, friends, and your peers around you all help shape yor identity. in the novels the joy luck club and king lear the search for your own identity is present between the daughters and he mothers in the joy luck club transitining from different cultures and norms. Also in king lear, charaters throught the play discover themselves. the inabiliy in obtaining your inner identity will result in utter chaos. presently in the joy luck club there are different stories about each family. Which leads to parents wanting to give there children a better life. in the mothers stories …show more content…
Now that he cannot see, he has to hear everything around him which helps him realize that the cannot always be seen and things are not always as they appear.” I have no way and therefore want no eyes.I stumbled when I saw. Fulloft ‘tis seen our means secure us and our mere defects prove commodities o dear son Edgar, the food of thy abused fathers warth might I but live to see thee in my touch i’d say I had eyes” (shakespear 4.1.19-25 pg. 173) Gloucester realizes his actions are a result of the hatefulnessthat he had when he first got news that Edgar wants to kill him. Which is an example of realizing what you cannot see, through all the trouble Gloucester endures because of his actions he finally sees the truest nature of his peers. Likewise, in “the joy luck club” once Lindo realizes she’s always trying to impress her parents. she realizes once she decides to live for herself she is no longer blinded to whom she wants to be. “and then I realized it was the first time she could see the power of the wind. I couldn’t see the wind itself, but I could see it carried the water that filled the river and shape the country side. It cause men to yelp and dance” (Tan pg.53). t her wedding, Lindo discouvers herself. While her soon to be new family is trying to change her but she refuses to change and will not let anyone ever take that
Of the many stories involving the many characters of "The Joy Luck Club", I believe the central theme connecting them all is the inability of the mothers and their daughters to communicate effectively.
Everyone in the world has their own identity but some are still searching for it. Many base their identity on race, religion, culture and language because it’s easier to belong to a certain group. However, there are some people who struggle with finding where they belong. For instance, James McBride in The Color of Water wonders who he is through most his childhood and some of his adult life. Mcbride tries to find himself by learning about his mother's background. After evaluating his mom’s past,culture and race his own issues with himself were made clearer because now he finally knows where he came from.
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.
Goneril is a predominate main character in the play and she is known for her evil ways. She is the perfect example of being entitled. Her selfish ways have a great impact on both herself and others. Towards the beginning of the play, and even through most of it, her entitlement has positive impacts on herself. She easily gets what she wants and she continues to seek fulfilment. However, she has a tremendous impact on others. She goes to great lengths to get what she wants, even in it means hurting those closest to her. In King Lear, Shakespeare uses the character of Goneril to depict the lengths an individual will go to when they feel entitled to get what they want and the devastating consequences that can result from their selfishness.
Lear can "see" through a sympathetic lens, after having exchanged the pride for shame, revealing to us that mental blindness can be more damaging than physical blindness. While Gloucester, who willingly admits that "[he] stumbled when [he] saw," is only able to "see," though sightless, after he has suffered (4.1.20). Only through the physical pain of losing his sight was Gloucester able to see the truth of his sons. Unquestionably, the plots of Lear and Gloucester run similar courses. However, Shakespeare employs Gloucester's plot to clarify Lear's plot. Through the physical blinding of Gloucester, Shakespeare provides an equivalent, which contextualizes King Lear's theme of consciousness and allows Lear's own metaphorical blindness to be fully
There is a common theme of hope throughout the stories of The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan. Even in the face of immeasurable danger and strife, the mothers and daughters in the book find themselves faithful in the future by looking to the past, which is only helped by the format of Tan’s writing. This is shown specifically in the stories of Suyuan and Jing-Mei Woo, Lena and Ying-Ying St. Clair, and Lindo and Waverly Jong. The vignette structure of The Joy Luck Club allows the stories to build on one another in a way that effortlessly displays both the happy and dark times in each mother’s life, which lets their experiences act as sources of background and guidance to their daughters in times when they need it most.
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.
After having both eyes gouged out by the Duke of Cornwall, Gloucester exclaims: “O my follies! Then Edgar was abused” (3.7.91). Unaware of Edmund’s betrayal, Gloucester had earlier told Edmund about his alliance with France in their invasion of England. Wanting to remove his father from power, Edmund conveys this information to the Duke of Cornwall and as a punishment, Gloucester has his eyes gouged out. This quote is important because it ties directly into the theme of “Blindness vs Sight.” Although he is literally blinded, it is at this moment that Gloucester is able to see the truth. Previously, he believes his son Edgar has betrayed him and therefore places his trust onto his other son, Edmund. Upon losing his vision, he finally regains his sight by realising Edgar’s innocence and Edmund’s treachery.
It's hard for some people to find themselves, and it’s easier for others. James Johnson is a good example of this. In order to find his identity his mother dies, he moves to countless different places, and meets thousands of different faces. Yet he doesn’t find who he is until his children are born and his wife ends up dying. He is brought to realize the difficulties life has to bring him to be able to enjoy the simplicity of knowing who he
Thrilling yet confusing, and even troublesome, Twelfth Night’s theme of identity is showed within the romantic comedy through many ways. As an essential subject establishing rich symbolism and imagery, it uses disguises and crafty characters’, which causes much confusion between the characters. Furthermore, the idea brings out the comical essence of the piece. It examines the gender roles in Twelfth Night relating to the history of Renaissance/Elizabethan Theatre; males played female roles—a male actor would play a female character (Viola) who disguises herself as a male (Cesario), for women were forbidden to act. Through What You Will, it proves one’s physical features, and how a person presents them self, possesses
With all the cultural clashes that the mothers and daughters are facing in The Joy Luck Club, it is hard for the characters to have a sense of identity. The daughters are torn between Chinese and American culture and are trying to figure out who they are. The daughters are also trying to figure out who their mothers are and how that affects them. The mothers have two lives, the ones they live in America and the ones that they left behind in
Lord of the Flies, an allegorical novel by William Golding, holds truths about mankind’s true nature of existence. The novel explores the savagery in all men that lies dormant, yet when society’s rules cease to exist, the boy’s innocence perishes along with it. The boys attempt to band together and mock the society that they came from, but not understanding the complexity of the situation, results in their society falling into ruins. On the island the boys are returned to man’s primitive nature, without rules or discipline, and they slowly drift into anarchy. Without proper guidance, the boys resort to cloaking their innocence with body paint to survive. With the body paint coating their skin, the boys bury their old personas within and allow themselves to commit acts that society would frown upon. When Jack’s tribe uses the facade of body paint to dissociate themselves from civilization’s morals, they denote that hiding one’s true identity liberates them from the constraints of society.
The Joy Luck Club is a movie that focuses on the relationships between four mothers and daughters. Each of the mothers in the movie have had at one time experienced something sad or unfortunate while living in China which made them evaluate the way that women are valued in that society. Each of them took the effort to find their own self-worth and change their destiny after they had followed through with the traditional Chinese values. They decided to start new lives, which meant moving to San Francisco and forgetting about the traditional Chinese stereotypes that had once controlled them. Having a similar past they started what was called The Joy Luck Club. After having children in America they began
Humans grow and change in many different ways throughout their lifetimes. People develop, mature, and start to get a sense of reality, but what humans do the most is lose themselves. It may have to do with one’s surroundings, influences or cultures but eventually someone can lose touch with who they are. The hard part about losing one’s self, is trying to get back to who they want to be. The main character in the novel, “The Namesake” by Jhumpa Lahiri, struggles with this constant battle of trying to figure out his identity. Throughout the whole novel, he is constantly trying out new ways to figure out who he is. In each stage of the main characters life, he is almost like a different person. His identity changes in his childhood, in his time as a young adult, and through the events after his father dies, all of which shape his identity by the end of the book.