Amy Tan Two Kinds Essay

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    What should a person look for when searching for their identity? A crucial component of a person’s identity is shaped by their relationships with others, particularly their mother. In Amy Tan’s The Bonesetter’s Daughter, there are two main mother-daughter relationships that play an integral role in the novel. The novel consists of three generations of women, and their relationships with one another significantly impact who all three become. LuLing’s relationship with her mother, Precious Auntie,

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    Jing Mei Conflicts

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    In the novel excerpt “Two Kinds”, Amy Tan uses central conflict between Jing-mei and her mother to develop the theme that with perseverance, good decisions and having faith in oneself, you can be whatever you aspire in a land where nothing is impossible. The main conflict between the two is Jing-mei going against her mother's American dream. The mother believes that there are greater opportunities in America because of her previous, sorrowful life in China. This then leads to her high expectations

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    “We all have unique identities that we develop within our cultures, but these identities are not fixed or static” (Trumbull and Pacheco 8). People should examine their culture to have a better understanding of how it affects their identity and perceptions. In order to understand one’s cultural identity, he or she need to understand what the term means. According to one source, cultural identity can be defined as, “These different experiences and the new values, beliefs, and ideas they produce contribute

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    When your mom asks you to do something, how do you respond? In the story “Two Kinds” by Amy Tan and the poem “Rice and Rose Bowl Blues” by Diane Mei Lin Mark, they include both respectful actions and disrespectful responses. Although both stories talk about mother and daughter relationships, they are different in how the daughters interact with their mothers. In addition to the story “Two Kinds,” Jing-mei is disrespectful to her mom. All her mom wants is for Jing-mei to have an activity that she

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    What should a person look for when searching for their identity? A crucial component of a person’s identity is shaped by their relationships with others, particularly the one with their mother. In Amy Tan’s The Bonesetter’s Daughter, there are two main mother-daughter relationships that play integral roles in the novel. The novel consists of three generations of women, and their relationships with one another significantly impact who all three are and become. LuLing’s relationship with her mother

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    follow their individual paths. We learn about these choices throughout the short story “Two Kinds” by Amy Tan. Tan describes the mental struggles of the protagonist Ni Kan as she is growing up through the vision of her mother. Tan illustrates how the mother has high expectations for Ni Kan, “You can be a prodigy, my mother told me when I was nine” (590). The pressures of her mother are destroying her, and Tan makes it clear how Ni Kan wants to do everything in her power not to succeed, even though

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    In Judith Ortiz Cofer’s “The Myth Of the Latin Woman” and Amy Tan’s “Mother Tongue” these women tell about difficulties on growing up a nonnative in America. I argue that these difficulties were mediocre. Cofer’s difficulties came from men mostly. Tan’s on the other hand came from society. Tan says, “Recently, I was made keenly aware of the different Englishes I do use (633).” Tan speaks the same language in many ways. She grew up having to speak formal English at school, and a “broken” English

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    experiences affect their perspective. Amy Tan’s, “Two Kinds,” Bharati Mukherjee’s, “Two Ways to Belong in America,” and Robert Lake’s, “An Indian Father’s Plea,” all show how the main characters have chosen to let their experiences have an effect on their cultural identity. A person’s cultural experiences shape perception based on their own identifications and they may chose to assimilate to different cultures. In the excerpt “Two Kinds,” written by Amy Tan, the author expresses her personal perception

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    inaccurately with assumptions that the two words are proportionate to each other, however, heritage of a family is what inspires and conceives traditions. In the story ‘Two Kinds’ by Amy Tan, she goes into depth about how strong family heritage lead her to be unique in a new world of exploration. In the story Jing-mei explains the stress of overcoming disliked aspects of heritage, “If felt like worms and toads and slimy things crawling out of my chest, but it also felt good” (Tan 231). A strong understanding

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    Two Kinds Culture

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    a limit. At the end of the day, you just have yourself. It’s your choice to choose- to listen, or to find your own way. To begin, in Two Kinds by Amy Tan, her mother expects her to be a prodigy. So, throughout the story, she is forced to do many things. Starring in a play, being tested on states and capitals, and being forced to play the piano. Amy submits to what her mother wants; but as she started to grow up. She began to rebel, “‘why don’t you like me the way I am?’ I cried. ‘I’m not

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