Joy Luck Club Essay

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    The Joy Luck Club: Summary One Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club is a fictional novel that tells about the experiences of several daughters and their Chinese mothers who immigrated to the United States. Amy Tan, the daughter of a Chinese immigrant, incorporates her cultural awareness and perception in the characterization of the mothers and their experiences through out the novel. Along with cultural influence, Tan uses several literary devices that acquaint the reader with the emotions, resiliency,

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    scholars’ articles, a diasporic and often considered as postcolonial discourses- Amy Tan’s debut novel The Joy Luck Club comes to my mind. Amy Tan, as one of the renowned contemporary Chinese American writers, and also as one of the daughters of the immigrants herself, writes several novels revealing situations and reflecting problems faced by the Chinese diaspora in America. Although The Joy Luck Club has been published for more than two decades, the stories inside are still going on in Chinese communities

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    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

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    “Then you must teach my daughter this same lesson. How to lose your innocence but not your hope. How to laugh forever”, Amy Tan wrote in The Joy Luck Club. This powerful quote not only exhibits the mindset that Amy has formed over the years, but also how various lessons has shaped her inner-being. Overcoming a past were all the odds were against her, even her mother, leaves Tan’s story worth being heard. Amy’s mixed heritage made adapting to the free life of America from an authoritarian Chinese

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    “A mother’s love never dies, not even if she doesn’t know whether her kids are alive.” The Joy Luck Club, written by Amy Tan, is an extraordinary book. Tan has been successful to show the relationship between mothers and daughters, the problems faced by the migrants, values and life style of Chinese culture in elegant way. Nevertheless, I think the writer has only focused on the dark side of life , only pain, sacrifices, hardships and conflicts have been shown. At first, my view for all the mothers

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    they have brought to America.” (Tan 31) Context: Jing-mei’s mother Suyuan started the Joy Luck club in 1949, just after she immigrated to San Francisco from China. Suyuan created the Joy Luck Club as a symbol of hope and strength while the club members were transitioning between their old and new lifestyles. Unfortunately, Suyuan died and in her place her daughter, Jing-mei, was to attend the weekly Joy Luck Club meetings. At her first meeting, Jing-mei felt victimized by the other ladies as they

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    Joy Luck Compare/Contrast Essay Many People have had the unfortunate experience of having to either be exiled from their homes, choose to leave their homes for their own safety, immigrating to a new country, or loosing family while on the journey leaving home to survive. Poems and short stores that I have read share alike and different themes to the book Joy Luck Club. All of these stories and poems are about many luckless people that have had to endure while under these tough circumstances.

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    Amy Tan's “The Joy Luck Club” The “Joy Luck Club,” by Amy Tan, is a collection of short stories about the relationships between Chinese born mothers and their American born daughters. The story called “Four Directions” is about a woman named Waverly Jong. The story is about Waverly trying to tell her mother that she is getting married to a American man named Richard. Waverly was a chess champion as while she was a young girl and she remembers the strategy that she used in her matches, and in

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    In the entertaining book “The Joy Luck Club” the vignette “The Red Candle” was a fantasy story of a mother and daughter in China. In which the belief in China was a matchmaker had to cast this young girl to marry this young boy,but as the girl spent more time with her “future husband” she sensed he was a more of a “ troublesome cousin” because of the planned future marriage the “wife” said “ my own family began treating me as if I belonged to somebody else”. From here on her point of view, she felt

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    In The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, the emotionality of the book gives readers a better sense of the character’s struggles throughout the novel. Despite bearing some superficial similarities, the differences between the novel of The Joy Luck Club and the film reveal the importance to the history of characters and how the events can change the emotional aspects and view of the characters. In the book, for example, there is one part in which the daughter Lena picks up the shattered pieces of the vase

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