"The generation gap within the joy luck club" Essays and Research Papers

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    centuries many children have experienced the pressure of fulfilling their parents’ expectations or following in their footsteps. This pressure will oftentimes have a negative effect for the children of those parents. In the chapter of Amy Tan’s Joy Luck Club‚ “Two Kinds‚” the reader is introduced to Jing-mei‚ a young Chinese girl who wishes to become the prodigy that her mother wishes her to be. However‚ her constant disappointment in the many challenges her mother presents her causes her to lose hope

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    were. The same comment is made from generation to generation and is always true; it has never been truer than it is today. These days‚ grown-ups describe children as «difficult»‚ «rude»‚ «wild» and «irresponsible». Only some people say that they will grow up to make our country a better place. For kids from 8 to 14 a new term «tweens» has recently been coined. They are no longer children nor yet teenagers‚ just between – tweens. They are said to be a generation in a fearful hurry to grow up. Instead

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    Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club: A Look at the Concept of Double-Life Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club is a narrative mosaic made up of the lives of four Chinese women and their Chinese American daughters. Because of its structure‚ the book can only loosely be called a novel. It is composed of sixteen stories and four vignettes‚ but like many novels‚ it has central characters who develop through the course of the plot. The daughters struggle with the complexities of modern life‚ including identity crises

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    In the novel‚ The Joy Luck Club‚ by Amy Tan‚ it tells of four Chinese women drawn together in San Francisco to play mah jong‚ and tell stories of the past. These four women and their families all lived in Chinatown and belong to the First Chinese Baptist Church. They were not necessarily religious‚ but found they could improve their home China. This is how the woo’s‚ the Hsu’s‚ the Jong’s and the St Clair’s met in 1949. The first member of the Joy Luck Club to die was Suyuan Woo. Her

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    Food is a very important symbol in The Joy Luck Club‚ by Amy Tan. The presence of meals cleverly show the thoughts and feelings of a character about his or her family members or familial situations. In An-mei’s story “Scar‚” the symbol of food is used to show the tension in the family‚ and the sacrifices the daughters make for their mothers. During dinner‚ An-mei’s mother appears at the door. She has been kicked out by her family after becoming a concubine for another man; this is viewed as a great

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    In Amy Tan’s Book‚ The Joy Luck Club‚ the author portrays the lives and relationships of four different Chinese mothers with their daughters. While doing so she establishes a connection that depicts the daughters to be the American translations of their mothers. Being that they were all subjected to many hardships in their lives‚ both as children and young adults‚ the mothers had wanted to “Americanize” their daughters so that they could seemly have a better life. Unfortunately‚ since all of the

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    Themes of conflicts between mother and child come up often in literature. For example‚ in “Rules of the Game”‚ and excerpt from “The Joy Luck Club” by Amy Tan‚ the complicated relationship between Waverly Place Jong and her mother is shown as Waverly becomes a chess champion at only 8 years old. Similarly‚ in Langston Hughes’ poem “Mother to Son” we see a mother giving her son life advice on how to overcome obstacles and keep climbing‚ based on personal experience. Both of these works of literature

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    Essay on Generation Gap

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    Essay on Generation Gap How many times have you felt that your parents don’t understand you‚ that they have no respect for you as an individual? How often do you shake your head in frustration and blame it on the ’generation gap’? Parents! They are like aliens from another planet altogether! You and they are in different camps; strangers forced to live under the same roof Right? Wrong! There is a way of bridging what appears to be a yawning chasm. If you genuinely want to improve your relationship

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    The Joy Luck Club The Key to understanding Lindo Jong is that she is a very strong and imaginative woman. She thought up a lie to get her out of her arranged marriage as a child‚ while still honouring her mother and father’s intentions for her. However‚ aside from Lindo’s creative and fun personality‚ she is also very proud and narrow minded. Lindo Jong was brought up as a Mandarin Chinese woman. As being so‚ she followed her parent’s plans and tried to be more and more like her mother. Lindo was

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    When children have nightmares‚ their mother comforts them. But when the mother is the nightmare‚ they have no comfort. The topics are excerpts‚ one is from Amy Chua’s memoir Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mom and the other is from Amy Tan’s novel The Joy Luck Club are about mother-daughter relationships. The authors wrote about their own memories. Chua is about being the mother of two daughters and Tan is about being the daughter of two Chinese immigrant parents. In Amy Chua’s excerpt “The Violin”‚ Chua

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