"The joy luck club mother daughter realtions" Essays and Research Papers

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    themselves and focus more on others and their problems. This can make the conversations between parent and child become scarce. Even without the difficulty of language in the way like with the mothers and the daughters of “The Joy Luck Club” by Amy Tan; we still have difficulty communicating with our parents. My mother and I do not speak all the time‚ yet in our tame relationship we still know of each other’s unconditional love. Even though‚ we could be called distant‚

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    Joshua Yu Ms. Lutyens/Ms. Byrne A.P­04 6 June 2013 The Joy Luck Club Critical Theory Paper Signing up for an A.P. class is definitely tough. I sailed through sophomore year with above average grades‚ not due to my interest and skills in English‚ but rather because the teacher was easy and the course was dumbed down. But when I walked in A.P. English 11‚ I felt uneasy and nervous. I knew “sailing through” was not going to work‚ and that I’d actually need to put a lot of effort in the course

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    “The Joy Luck Club” was written by Amy Tan‚ an important novel that shows the love and hardship mothers from a chinese culture bring. The book had all started in 1949‚ where four chinese immigrants had recently moved to San Francisco because of a war‚ where the joy luck club had all begun. Three main points in the story would have to be how important mothers should be to families‚ that winning is not everything‚ and also that one can never judge people’s experiences in life if one did not live it

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    of Prejudice The movie I selected is “The Joy Luck Club” that illustrates the gap and the misunderstanding between foreign-born mothers from China and their American-born daughters who are ignorant of their culture‚ life‚ morals‚ and ways. Jing-mei‚ the main character in the film‚ has taken her mother‚ Suyuan’s place playing mahjong in a weekly gathering that her deceased mother had organized in China and revived in San Francisco- The Joy Luck Club. The club’s other members- auntie Lindo‚ Ying-ying

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    The Joy Luck Club‚ by the Chinese-American author Amy Tan‚ deals with many different themes. However‚ the idea from this novel that piqued my interest the most was how the story dealt with the language and cultural barriers that exist between generations in families that have immigrated to the United States. The book deals with four Chinese women who moved to the United States in hopes of finding better lives for their children‚ and it deals with each of their daughters who have grown up in America

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    Amy Tan’s Joy Luck Club‚ it is clear that it does affect the lives of the mothers and daughters. Although sexism is not a major theme in this novel‚ it runs throughout the whole novel since the story is focused on Chinese women that grew up in China and therefore they have this tradition of sexism inside. The reader of Joy Luck Club can observe the signs of sexism in almost every story of the novel. Each mother or daughter tells two stories in the novel‚ except for Jing-mei‚ whose mother already died

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    Chinese and American Cultures In the Joy Luck Club American and Chinese cultural differences are brought to perspective in Amy Tan’s novel‚ The Joy Luck Club. The book follows the lives of eight women‚ 4 American born daughters and 4 Chinese immigrant mothers as their lives intertwine with each other in America. As the daughters clash with the mothers‚ they are faced to embrace the American culture‚ to comply with their mothers and accept the mothers deep Chinese cultural heritage or to

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    transition from Chinese to American culture‚ while still establishing their own identity. The Joy Luck Club describes the relationships between recently immigrated Chinese mothers and their culturally confused daughters. Because the daughters of the novel are genetically Chinese and have been raised in Chinese households‚ they struggle to fully adjust in the modern American society. Amy Tan in her novel The Joy Luck Club explores how the women of the Chinese culture deal with strict cultural pressure while

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    Overview of the Movie: The Joy Luck club centers on four‚ middle-aged‚ Chinese immigrants‚ Suyuan Woo‚ An-mei Hsu‚ Lindo Jong‚ and Ying-ying St. Clair. Although the relationships that exist between each of the four women are important‚ it is the exploration into each woman’s relationship with her first generation daughter that is central to the plot line. Through this exploration‚ the generational and cultural gaps that exist between the each of the women and their daughters are exposed; allowing several

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    “I have discovered in life that there are ways of getting almost anywhere you want to go‚ if you really want to go” (Hughes). In the texts Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck and The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan‚ the main characters both have dreams for the future. The difference is what drives each character toward the dream. We learn from these stories that dreams can both positivelypositively and negatively affect people’s lives and relationships‚ depending on the motivation to pursue them. In Of Mice

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