The Joy Luck Club

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    The Joy Luck Club Entry 1 When Jing-mei’s mother was living in Kweilin with her two baby girls, an army officer came to her house, telling her to go quickly to her husband in Chungking. Her friend bribed a man to steal a wheelbarrow and promised to warn her other friends that Kweilin was no longer safe. Suyuan packed all of her things into the wheelbarrow and began to push towards Chungking. When the wheel broke, she tied her babies across her body in scarves. She then took one bag of food and one

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    The Joy Luck Club Theme Analysis The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan is an entertaining book that focuses on four Chinese American immigrant families. They face problems in their hometown which causes them to move to the United States. They end up moving to San Francisco and face many different problems with their cultural background. The theme of The Joy Luck Club is the relationship between both the mothers and their daughters. A variety of different events occur throughout the book that explains

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    In the “Joy Luck Club” many of the recurring themes are having to do with the variances of cultures between American and Chinese cultures. These differences cause many of the generational gaps between the mothers and daughters. Many of the differences start with the concept of high and low context cultures. Because of the low/high context cultures, the mothers and daughters based their relationships on the attitudes and ways they were taught as they were raised. The question begins with, what in

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    people maintain some of their original culture, they are ultimately influenced by the American culture and lose a portion of their past identities. The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan, shows precisely the relationships between Chinese mothers and their oh-so-American daughters, and how their cultural differences leave a huge gap between them. The Joy Luck Club is initially established by Suyuan, Jing-mei’s mother, in order for Chinese immigrants to find common ground in their struggles and difficulties. In

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    Amy Tan’s Joy Luck Club was a sensational read. Not only was it entertaining it also taught a significant lesson in what storytelling has to do with memory and inheritance. Usually most books set in the 40’s have a boring slow paced theme. This novel was completely different it was based on the bond between mothers and daughters, and how they could unravel the mystery surrounding their mothers is to understand who they, themselves, really are. The power of this novel comes from various places, but

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    the relationship will just be playing games, manipulating each other. The Joy Luck Club is about four Chinese mothers and their relationships with their daughters. The major influences that complicate these mother daughter relationships are differing opinions on cultural beliefs and a lack a trust between the mothers and daughters. Amy Tan shows the idea about trust's importance through the relationships in the Joy Luck Club through Waverly and Lindo Jong’s relationship, by showing that all relationships

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    In the film, The Joy Luck Club, the song "I Learned From You" by Miley Cyrus and Billy, can be used to represent the relationship between Waverly Jong and her mother. The song would appear in Rules of the Game because it is when Waverly realizes that she learned her strength from her mother.   As the beginning of the scene, where Rules of the Game begins, the song should start playing. It is in the first words spoken by Waverly that she says, "...my mother taught me the art of invisible strength

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    In the Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, tells stories of four Chinese mothers and four Chinese-American daughters and their mother-daughter relationship. The four mothers met in a San Francisco church in 1949. Suyuan Woo, founder of the Joy Luck Club, convinced the other mothers An-Mei Hsu, Lindo Jong, and Yingying St. Clair to join the club. The club would meet every week at one of the mother’s house where they eat food, play mahjong, and brag about their daughters. The Chinese-American daughters tell

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    Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club features a handful of unsuccessful marriages. In particular, Lena and Harold St. Clair have a sinking relationship because Lena finds faults within their relationship but never voices her concerns. As a result, Lena fails to properly convey her feelings and when she does voice her opinion, she inadequately does so, leaving Harold confused with Lena’s motive for speaking up (Tan 164). Lena’s failure to properly communicate with her partner showcases the importance of communication

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    In Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club, the author chooses to primarily focus her novel on the miscommunications between traditional Chinese mothers and their American-born daughters via the use vignettes from almost every character. Throughout the novel, Tan writes about several characters that have made a hero’s journey according to Joseph Campbell. Campbell states that a hero’s journey includes: a departure, how a hero sets off onto their journey, a fulfillment, their goal that is being accomplished,

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