"Compare and contrast the mother daughter relationships in everyday use by alice walker and two kinds by amy tan" Essays and Research Papers

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    Mothers …some say‚ “You can’t live with them!” Our society cannot live without them. We would not be here without our mothers. However‚ many mothers have forgotten they were daughters first. Mothers and daughters have an interesting relationship. Throughout the years and in many cultures‚ mothers and daughters have had a symbiotic‚ co-dependency. Some are close relationships; others have a love/hate relationship . In Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use”‚ the mother narrates this story about a

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    Amy Tan, Two Kinds

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    Composition & Literature | Amy Tan | Professor Blum | JAEL VARGAS 12/17/2012 | This story’s main events take place in Chinatown throughout the 1950s and perhaps early 1960s. The main character of the story‚ who is also the protagonist‚ is the author herself: Amy Tan. The antagonist happens to be her own mother‚ who is always pushing Amy to discover some hidden talent and be someone she is not. There are a few other minor characters in the story. There is Lindo Jong (who she calls

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    Two Kinds by Amy Tan

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    Two Kinds by Amy Tan A: Synopsis This short story‚ ‘Two Kinds’ is more focused on the relationships between mother and daughter. The narrator of this story‚ Jing Mei recalls of the days when her mother wanted her to be a prodigy in America. Her mother moved to San Francisco when she lost everything in China. At first‚ she thought that her daughter would be like Shirley Temple as they watched how talented Shirley Temple was in acting. And one day when the narrator’s mother saw a young Chinese girl

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    Two Kinds by Amy Tan

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    author‚ Amy Tan is a second generation Chinese immigrant. Her parents are both Chinese immigrants. Her father and one of her brothers passed away during her early teens. At that period‚ she found out that her mother had been married before in China. She left her divorced ex-husband and three daughters in China. In 1987‚ after her mother recovered from a serious illness‚ they took a trip to China where Tan reunited with her half-sisters. The trip offered Tan a new perspective on her mother and inspired

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    Two Kinds by Amy Tan

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    Not My Dream In the story “Two Kinds” by Amy Tan‚ we are shown the struggles of a young girl Jing-Mei. Her struggle is that of a young girl growing up and trying to find her own sense of identity. Her troubles are compounded by her mother‚ who convinces her that she can become someone important. Because of her mother’s constant overbearing behavior‚ Jing-Mei does everything she can to annoy and displease her mother even to the point of being a failure. This fight to find

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    "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan

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    "Two Kinds" The story "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan represents the theme that parents cannot control their children‚ but can only guide them. A Chinese mother and daughter Ni Kan are at odds with each other in story. The mother pushes her daughter to become a prodigy of some sort‚ her daughter does try to follow her mother ’s orders but has she gets older she realizes she wants to find her own self and not to be what her mother wants her to be. They both have conflicting values‚ which is the theme of the

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    Two kinds by amy tan

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    Not My Dream In the story "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan‚ we are shown the struggles of a young girl Jing-Mei. Her struggle is that of a young girl growing up and trying to find her own sense of identity. Her troubles are compounded by her mother‚ who convinces her that she can become someone important. Because of her mother’s constant overbearing behavior‚ Jing-Mei does everything she can to annoy and displease her mother even to the point of being a failure. This fight to find her own identity against

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    Everyday Use by Alice Walker The Story narrates the life of a mother and her two daughters who have completely opposite personalities. Ideally‚ one is outgoing and other is reserved. The outgoing daughter‚ Dee‚ is widely depicted as an eccentric individual who is gratified by superficial material things. The reserved daughter is largely depicted as humble and not very intelligent and knowledgeable. The family is undergoing social cultural transition. The author demonstrates how education and intercultural

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    Everyday Use by Alice Walker In the story of Everyday Use‚ is in first person narrator which is in the mother’s point of view. Telling the story in first person will allow the reader to get an inside perspective without much judgment. Ms. Johnson (mom) and Dee is the main conflict in the story. Dee wanted the precious quilts and quickly she realizes that she is not getting the precious quilts‚ she gets furious. Ms. Johnsons’ family is poor and the yard is part of what they call an “extended living

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    Two Kinds By Amy Tan

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    Not able to understand her child’s frustration‚ the narrator sees this outburst to be an act of ungratefulness. The narrator’s mother states‚ "If she had as much talent as she has temper‚ she would be famous now" (385). Blinded by the desire of her daughter becoming a star the narrator’s mother is unaware of what she is actually doing to her child. The narrator’s mother is forcing her to become someone she isn’t for the sake of

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