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The Joy Luck Club Literary Analysis

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In a series of sixteen chapters that spans generations and continents, Amy Tan explores one of the main themes of the novel, The Joy Luck Club, which consists of the complex relationship between the first-generation Chinese-American daughters and their mothers that are able to stand resilient despite cultural tensions and generational differences. Such conflict among the characters arises from language barriers between the Chinese mothers and the Americanized daughters. The loss of a sense of Chinese heritage and the daughters’ assimilation into American culture kindles misunderstanding amid the characters in the novel. In the midst of barriers and conflicts the women face throughout their lives, the women in The Joy Luck Club form their sense of identity by breaking through cultural, language and emotional barriers that hinder them from exploring, connecting and developing. Amy Tan’s use of literary and rhetorical devices evokes emotions …show more content…

In 1985, she wrote the story Rules of the Game which thus led to the creation of The Joy Luck Club. The novel explored the distinct relationship between Chinese women and their Chinese-American daughters. Moreover, Amy Tan wrote The Joy Luck Club to try to understand her own relationship with her mother. Tan's Chinese parents wanted her to embody both an American and Chinese mentality however, she found this duality particularly difficult to submerge into as an adolescent. While the generational differences were like those experienced in other families, the dual distinctions added another element to the complexity. Furthermore, “Tan wrote The Joy Luck Club not only to sort out her cultural heritage but to learn how she and her mother could get along better” (“Plot” 1). The well acclaimed novel received the Los Angeles Times Book Award and was translated into 25 languages. She later on wrote The Kitchen’s God’s Wife, The Bonesetters Daughter, and The Valley of

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