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    English III L1 Mod E 01 June 2012 The Joy Luck Club “Parents often talk about the younger generation as if they didn’t have anything to do with it.” Said by Haim Ginott‚ an expert and child therapist who had a great impact on the relationship between adults and children. (http://www.betweenparentandchild.com/index.php ?s=content&p=Haim). According to the quote of Haim Ginott‚ the parents often feel unable to control their younger generation‚ and that is caused by a generation gap‚ which is

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    ENGL 1302 Joy Luck Club Essay An Analysis of “The Joy Luck Club” In this essay‚ I seek to analyze the miscommunication between a mother and a daughter from Amy Tan’s book‚ “The Joy Luck Club.” In the three stories I will be using taken from the collective works‚ the two primary characters are Lindo Jong‚ the mother‚ and her daughter‚ Waverly Jong. Lindo is a traditional Chinese mother attempting to live in a Chinese community but playing by American rules. She is extremely cynical and demands

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    Consequences The Joy Luck Club presents the stories of four Chinese immigrant women and their American-born daughters. All of their lives‚ the Chinese mothers in The Joy Luck Club have struggled to make their own decisions and establish their own identities in a culture where obedience and conformity are expected. For example‚ when Suyuan Woo is a refugee during the Japanese invasion‚ she decides that she will not be a passive victim and will choose her own happiness. She forms the Joy Luck Club to provide

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    Joy Luck Club analysis

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    Joy Luck Club - Analysis About the Author - What I believe my books are about is relationships and family. Approaching the Text -It is easy to see that The Joy Luck Club began as a series of short stories which Tan has collected and integrated to form a novel because of the elements and qualities that its four sections and various sub-sections have in common. -The most obvious of these are considerations of Chinese American life‚ the interaction (often troubled) of relationships with men (fathers

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    novel‚ The Joy Luck Club‚ about the relationships and experiences of four Chinese mothers and four Chinese-American daughters‚ I found out the answer to this question. The difference in upbringing of those women born during the first quarter of this century in China‚ and their daughters born in the American atmosphere of California‚ is a difference that doesn’t exactly take a scientist to see.<br><br>From the beginning of the novel‚ you hear Suyuan Woo tell the story of "The Joy Luck Club‚" a group

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    joyHigh-context Cultures and Low-context Cultures The Joy Luck Club explores the clash between Chinese culture and American culture. One way of understanding the difference is to look at communication in these cultures. Chinese culture can be classified as a high-context culture and American culture as a low-context culture. First I will define these terms‚ then explain the significance of these two categories‚ and finally apply them to The Joy Luck Club. * Culture is the way of living which a group

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    given environment or society as a whole. Moral behavior is any behavior that one person considers and believes is right and wrong‚ which can contradict the thoughts of the society’s conventional behavior. In each book‚ To Kill a Mockingbird‚ The Joy Luck Club‚ and Uglies‚ there was some sort of struggle that made some of the characters oppose what was considered conventional. Atticus‚ Jing Mei-Woo‚ and Tally all went against the conventional behaviors of their towns and in Jing Mei- Woo’s case‚ her

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    The novel‚ The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan takes place in a couple of different places. All of Suyuan Woo’s childhood memories take place in China. After coming to America the setting takes place in San Francisco California in 1949. Also there are few different time frames. The time frames consist of the 1920’s to 1980’s. I have to give this timeframes because of the flashbacks that are given in the book. The characters that I believed are most fully developed are Jing-ming “June” Woo‚ Suyuan Woo‚

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    David Semester 2 P. 3 9/29/12 The Joy Luck Club Each generation is different from each other. While the younger generation has their opinions on things‚ the older generations have different opinions on it. This is the result of the society they are raised in and the changes in the society as the generations evolve. This is exhibited in Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club. In the book it displayed how the mothers‚ who were raised in China‚ had contrasting opinions on love‚ family‚ and life than their

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    Reading Guides | | | The Joy Luck Club Amy Tan Paperback Other formats: Hardcover $16.00 add to cart Read more... | | | INTRODUCTION Through the stories of The Joy Luck Club‚ we peer into the secret-laden lives of eight Chinese immigrant mothers and their American-born daughters. The daughters reject their mothers’ seemingly constant criticism of everything they choose‚ from husbands to hairdos. They view their mothers’ warnings as irrelevant‚ and their advice as intrusive. The

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