the best of her ability at school. What motivated her to learn English was the challenge and…
Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption follows the story of Louie Zamperini, a rebellious child who grew up to become one of the fastest runners of the 1930s. He competed as an Olympic track runner in the 1936 Berlin Olympics. The future was looking bright for Zamperini before World War II began, which resulted in the Olympics being cancelled and Louie being drafted into the Army Air Forces as a bombardier. Midway through 1943, his B-24 crash landed in the Pacific Ocean. For weeks, Louie and two other men drifted westward across a seemingly endless ocean, accompanied by a pack of sharks and surviving on scraps of bird and fish meat and the occasional rainfall. Eventually, he arrived in Japanese…
The essay “Mother Tongue” describes a writer who grew up with a mother of Asian origin and the limitations created by her mother’s speech. The author, Amy Tan, defines her mother’s English as “broken” and that it created communication barriers. For example, when Tan’s mother would need to call her boss about work, she would rely on her daughter to make the phone call and use proper english. When Tan decided to go into English in college, it seemed foolish since she was more skilled in math and science. The author also mentions how not everyone’s speech is the same, but that is not a bad thing. Tan decided to start writing fiction, and write a book in a way her mother would comprehend. Though the writing was harshly critiqued, Tan knew she…
Two women, Karen Bell and Patricia M. Samford, studied the religious practices of the enslaved in the eighteenth century during the height of the transatlantic slave trade. Bell focuses on the enslaved Africans who arrived in Georgia, while Samford looks at those who came to Virginia, specifically to Williamsburg and the surrounding plantations. The transatlantic slave trade stole men and women away from their families, communities, and way of life. It forced them through a brutal passage across an ocean to a new world where they were forced to work in horrendous conditions. Bell and Samford study how the enslaved men and women held onto their spiritual practices and embraced new faith to form their own communities.…
Amy Tan has a contentious relationship with her mother perceived from her hostile tone. All mother-daughter relationships have troubles. In excerpts from Amy Chua’s memoir, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mom, and Amy Tan’s novel, The Joy Luck Club, mother-daughter relationships can be seen through diction, and tone. The annoyed tone in the situation between Amy Chua and her daughter shows a caring relationship while the hostile and hateful tone in Amy Tan’s excerpt shows a poor relationship with a hateful past.…
Sandra Cisneros uses literary techniques to characterize Rachel she uses, many metaphors and imagery to give the reader a sense of what going on in Rachel's life. The author expresses logos and ethos in the passages.…
Have you ever wondered about the effect of a person’s culture on their views? Culture has an important effect on a person’s views. Many authors, such as Amy Tan, Santha Rama Rau, and Robert Lake, have strong views about culture. Their stories show the relationship between a person’s culture and their view on the world. A person’s culture can affect the way they view others and the world.…
In the short story, “Two Kinds” by Amy Tan, the concept of The American Dream is illustrated through a mother and daughter relationship. The relationship is based on the mother wanting her daughter to accomplish The American Dream. The main character Jing-mei's mother looks at life in America as living The American Dream. Jing- mei states, “My mother believed you could be anything you wanted to be in America” (Tan 46). In her mother’s mind, she believed if you dedicated yourself to anything with enough hard work it was possible. This idea inspired her mother more than Jing-mei; her mother was always pushing her to be the best. Whether she was an actress or pianist there was always the idea that if enough time and effort were put into these…
Once one becomes part of the parents only club, one is expected to make the right decisions for one's child. Which is, giving one's child a chance at every possibility to obtain success. But, how much of it is truly for one's child and how much is for one's own personal fulfillment? In the short story by Amy Tran ‘Two kinds” we see into the life of a young Chinese American and her mother, who wishes for nothing less than her daughter to be a protege. As readers learn about how Mother goes about with this desire, one comes to question her motives. Does she want this because she believes this is truly what her daughter needs or, does she want this for herself, in order to fill a void left by her past? This selfish desire causes a clash between mother and daughter.…
Amy Tan writes as many hidden things as the number of her story in Two Kinds.…
The second chapter, food as a tool of communication and female empowerment in Like Water For Chocolate, expands the discussion in chapter one of the importance of the kitchen as a space for immigrants, and further the role of food and cooking in communication. In Laura Esquivel's Like Water for Chocolate food serves as a social lubricant. Unlike the other ethnic American novels, neither violence nor discrimination scenes are mentioned in Like Water For Chocolate. Rather, the author weaves the novel, which models its structure after a cookbook, around her protagonist's struggle to claim a positive identity against ideologies that oppress her through pleasurable experiences of taste. Moreover, the novel is mainly set in the kitchen to reveal…
I read the article “Is Scientific Progress Inevitable?” which was written by Andrew Irvine on 2006. It was published in the book In the Agora: The Public Face of Canadian Philosophy. The main idea of the article is scientific progress is not inevitable.…
“The Piano Lesson” by August Wilson tells the story of Boy Willie who travels up to Philadelphia from Georgia to visit his sister, and try to convince her to sell their inherited piano. After he arrives his sister, Bernice, refuses to sell the piano because of the history of the family it possesses. The piano was stolen from their family’s owners during the time of slavery. It was stolen because Willie and Bernice’s father, Boy Charles, had carved pictures of members of their family sold to a different owner as well as other family members and important events. After stealing the piano their father was killed by the white people who found it was stolen. Due to the pain the piano caused Bernice refused to play it but didn’t let it be sold.…
“Two Kinds” written by Amy Tan and “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman are stories and reading that show the family relationships. They are two different stories but have quite similarities. The similarity between the two stories is to me is the reaction of their love one when at time they are too assertive, forceful and overbearing towards people they care. In “Two Kinds” story the author demonstrates the relationship between a mother and daughter which is the outline of the main character Jing-mei Woo’s childhood and the effects of her mother’s high expectations for her life. Whereas, “The Yellow Wallpaper” is a short story that illustrate the bond between a husband and wife. According to the Suess, Barbara…
In "Two Kinds," Amy Tan writes a coming of age story about a young girl in…