Kingston Woman Warrior Essay

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    In The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston, Brave Orchid (the mother of Kingston) walks the line of parenting between helping her daughter succeed and hurting her. While raising Kingston she always seems to be putting a pressure on her to be better and that she isn’t good enough. By the end of the book we can see that Brave orchid and Kingston’s relationship damaged and they barely speak. Yet despite the fact that it hurt their relationship, Brave Orchid would tell kingston stories of strength

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    The woman warrior by Maxine Kingston elaborates readers what it was like to grow up as a female Chinese American. Kingston came to America as a little girl with her family. Even though she was in America, she still had to deal with old Chinese traditions. Traditions where women were seen as useless and as slaves. But, Kingston refused to believe that women are worthless. She states, “When one of my parents or the emigrant villagers said, ‘feeding girls is feeding cowbirds’, I would thrash on the

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    Maxine Hong Kingston ‘The Woman warrior’ takes place in No Society Village, a medical school in Canton, and Stockton,California, where Kingston was born. The novel starts with Kingston’s paternal aunt, whom the family say’s is an embarrassment and refuses to mention the aunts name. Then Kingston starts talking about her mother, Brave Orchid, who studied in a medical school before she joined with her husband in America. In the novel Kingston mentions a lot of people that are her family, friends, heroines

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    Point of View in The Woman Warrior "...Point of view is... an artful treatment of the facts [in a story]...," a treatment with which the author decides who is telling the story, as well as the credibility given to the story (Macauley and Lanning 132). Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woman Warrior is not a story, but an autobiography of her life as a Chinese-American girl growing up in California. Although it is not a story, Kingston must decide from which point of view she is going to tell her own

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    The Woman Warrior: A Tale of Identity

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    The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts by Maxine Hong Kingston is a collection of memoirs, a blend of Kingston’s autobiography with Chinese folklore. The book is divided into five interconnected chapters: No Name Woman, White Tigers, Shaman, At the Western Palace, and A Song for a Barbarian Reed Pipe. In No Name Woman, three characters are present: Kingston, Kingston’s mother, and Kingston’s aunt. This section starts off with Kingston’s mother retelling the story of her aunt and her

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    The Warrior Woman, she endures the process of defining herself over a series of stories, not all of which are hers, and ultimately, comes to a conclusion about what her identity really is. Through becoming a background character, participating in anti-cultural behaviors, and adding her own crucial embellishments throughout her mother’s stories, Kingston navigates her own selfness and pieces together a fluid, yet satisfying identity as a storyteller, based on the identities of others. Kingston shifts

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    chapter, “A Song For A Barbarian Reed Pipe”, Kingston expressed the idea of cultural aspects and how they can hinder a woman’s ability in society. Kingston talked about how she was silent for most of her life. However, it was not only her. As she stated, “[t]he other Chinese girls did not talk either…so I knew the silence had to do with being a Chinese girl," (cite). Their silence was based on their traditional Chinese culture. Now, I can connect why Kingston brought up the way Chinese women were because

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    A warrior is defined as a “brave or experienced soldier or fighter.” These few words characterize some of the most valiant souls that have stepped on our planet. Whether they are the firefighters and police officers that fearlessly ran into the fire of the Twin Towers or the current marines that are stationed around the world, there is an abundance of warriors that surround us at every moment. In turn, the definition of warrior has changed through generations. During the medieval times, a typical

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    Throughout the years poverty has played an important role in changing traditions and cultures. Poverty has changed the role of women and their ways of thinking. In “No Name Woman”, Maxine Hong Kingston showed an example of how poverty changed the responsibilities of women in a small village in China. According to the narrator’s mother, the women in this Chinese village, during the twentieth century, were to get married for one night and then all the men leave to America, to work there and send money

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    Asian American Narratives Defined by the Intergenerational Model The Asian American experience primarily narrates a story of hardship in assimilation into the American society. However, these stories are heavily nuanced depending on the generational perspective. The Asian American experience from the first generation emphasizes the practical concerns in surviving economically in a foreign land. On the other hand, the second generation recounts social and personal conflicts that primarily deal with

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