Woman warrior

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    The Woman Warrior

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    Maxine Hong Kingston's memoir The Woman Warrior, details the many holes in Kingston's life story. As her family traded in China for America, some of Kingston's family history got lost in the transition. She attempts to uncover her family's past through extrapolating talk-stories. In a memoir reliant on reiterated stories, the reader questions the reliability of the information. These talk-stories retold by Kingston may have transformed into something more than they originally were. As Kingston pieces

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    characters that are either dynamic or static. In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible and Maxine Hong Kinston’s The Woman Warrior, dynamic and static characters play large roles in developing the plot. Mary Warren, in The Crucible, is a dynamic character whose unpredictability and compliance affects not only her own fate but also the fate of others in the play. In contrast, Brave Orchid, in The Woman Warrior is a static character whose views on women’s equality remain the same as the novel progresses. While Mary

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    Maxine Hong Kingston uses her memoire The Woman Warrior as a way to bring to life many talk stories she heard while growing up in a Chinese immigrant home. The Woman Warrior is a complex piece of writing that is able to weave fantasy and reality into one singular unit. Throughout the book Kingston explores the various obstacles that Chinese women faced in their life, whether it be as an immigrant in America or as a young women still in China. Each woman in the book had their own unique experience

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    The Woman Warrior Essay

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    Thinking in terms of the actual controversies surrounding The Woman Warrior, in Chin’s parodic essay what is Frenchtown a direct reference to? Who are the “Chinese” in his essay paralleled to in U.S. culture? Answer: Frenchtown is a direct reference to the people whom have criticised the book The Woman Warrior. These people have criticised his similiar story “The Unmanly Warrior”. This connection makes this story parallel to The Woman Warrior. To elaborate more, the myth of Joan of Arc is similar to

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    In The Woman Warrior, Maxine Hong Kingston crafts a fictitious memoir of her girlhood among ghosts. The book’s classification as a memoir incited significant debate, and the authenticity of her representation of Chinese Americanism was contended by Asian American scholars and authors. The Woman Warrior is ingenuitive in its manipulation of the autobiographical genre. Kingston integrates the importance of storytelling in the evolution of her identity and relates her method of exploring self-discovery

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    In Maxine Hong Kingston’s “The Woman Warrior”, in chapter 2 “White Tigers” Kingston says that Chinese immigrants say things such as “better to raise geese than girls”. They also say “Chinese executed women who disguised themselves as soldiers or students, no matter how bravely they fought or how high they scored on the examinations”. I argue that in doing this, the texts suggest shockingly, that Chinese immigrants continue to treat woman as if they are worthless, which is why Maxine Hong Kingston

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    Maxine Hong Kingston uses several different points of view in her novel, The Woman Warrior. A different perspective is utilized in each chapter depending on the focus of the story being told. For instance, Kingston describes any experiences of her childhood in first person. On the other hand, any story that focuses on her mother or her family in general is told in third person. By doing this, she is able to convey each story from the viewpoint that best describes the story whether it be from the

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    Essay The Woman Warrior

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    The Woman Warrior        Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woman Warrior discusses her and her mother Brave Orchid's relationship. On the surface, the two of them seem very different however when one looks below the surface they are very similar. An example of how they superficially seem different is the incident at the drug store when Kingston is mortified at what her mother makes her do. Yet, the ways that they act towards others and themselves exemplifies their similarities at a deeper level

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    Woman Warrior Essay

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    Woman Warrior Essay Maxine Hong Kingston's novel, The Woman Warrior is a semi-autobiographical collection of short stories that chronicles her childhood in California. It gives the reader a feeling of how it feels like to be a Chinese American girl growing up with traditional parents in a world that is quite different from theirs. Throughout the novel, both she and her mother refer to the outside world as "ghosts." The subtitle given to the book is Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts. To figure

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    A typical warrior is a medieval knight in shining armor fighting for his life and homeland. Today, the definition of what it means to be a warrior has become ambiguous. Often times, we view those willing to sacrifice their lives for others--soldiers, police officers, or firefighters--as warriors. Even expanded in this way, the warrior still has a connotation of physical bravery, masculine strength, and unhindered confidence. However, the word warrior can have an entirely new meaning when we use it

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