Lit Analysis Paragraph In The Woman Warrior‚ Kingston describes the power of the "Sitting Ghost" and it’s ability to absorb Brave Orchid’s energy‚ in order to describe how women in the Chinese society are unable to have a voice due to pressure to fit society’s standards. In this section of the novel Brave Orchid has decided to stand up to a ghost that all her classmates are talking about. Little does she know that this ghost represents more. In Chinese society‚ Women must meet the standards such
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Cited: Kingston‚ Hong Maxine. The Woman Warrior. New York: Vintage International‚ 1989. 19. Print Kingston‚ Hong Maxine. The Woman Warrior. New York: Vintage International‚ 1989. 47. Print. Kingston‚ Hong Maxine. The Woman Warrior. New York: Vintage International‚ 1989. 165. Print.
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Warrior Woman: A Spiritual Awakening Mary Crow Dog‚ an American Indian activist and member of the Lakota tribe in South Dakota‚ struggled with her identity because of her mixed ethnicity and her exposure to conflicting religious influences early in life. Her complex religious views resulted from her confusion over the stark contrast between the positive representation of woman in traditional Native American religion and the negative treatment and limited power of native women in modern culture
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In the “No Name Woman” section of The Woman Warrior by Maxine Kingston‚ the family punishes the aunt for adultery by acting as though she never existed and ultimately dehumanizing her to the point of a fate worse than death. This is expressed in the following quote‚ “Don’t tell anyone you had an aunt. Your father does not want to hear her name. She has never been born” (Kingston 1515). Kingston’s father went from a family of brothers and one sister‚ to a family of nothing but brothers. The family
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Fa Mu Lan: Book vs. Movie The book The Woman Warrior‚ by Maxine Hong Kingston‚ and the movie Mulan both tell the same story‚ but in very different ways. They have many similarities and differences in their plots. The main message “To thine own self be true‚” is shown a lot more in the movie compared to the book. They were the same in the overall story‚ but small details like how their family acts when they come home‚ their love life‚ and how they decided to go to war differ extravagantly. Some
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or slaves" (19). Talk-story supplied Chinese girls with dreams of becoming more than their culture allows them to. It is through these stories that women live to their fullest extent. The stories exemplify what a woman strives to be‚ not a mere housewife or slave‚ but a great warrior. One such talk-story is that of Fa Mu Lan. Throughout the years‚ the story of Fa Mu Lan has changed from storyteller to storyteller‚ each with its own dramatic difference. To illustrate the dramatic changes that
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The Silent Treatment: Suppression of the Voice in The Woman Warrior and When Living Was A Labor Camp Gloria Anzaldúa‚ in her novel Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza‚ proclaims that “I will have my voice: Indian‚ Spanish‚ white. I will have my serpent’s tongue – my woman’s voice‚ my sexual voice‚ my poet’s voice. I will overcome the tradition of silence” (81). Anzaldúa is speaking out against those who encourage and demand that she (and other minorities) tread with caution when they
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The Woman Warrior In Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman Warrior‚ Maxine’s search for self-identity is seen through her quest to understand the value of a woman as taught to her through both her American and Chinese cultures. Maxine uses the stories that her mom tells her‚ as well as her experiences in life to guide her toward finding out who she is as a person. Her views about the role of women are strong from the onset and in the end she realizes that she has the potential to be more than what
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She focuses her stories on the way the rich cultural traditions of her parents influenced her American way of growing up. Kingston tells her story The Woman Warrior “No Name Woman‚” in an ethnic style of writing. Her use of symbolism and cultural understanding paint a vivid picture. She begins with her mother talking to her in a cryptic secretive manner. Kingston tells the story of her aunt in segments‚ first with
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Culture is embedded in the identity of every individual person. Although varying in values and customs‚ culture contributes to the basic understanding of one’s self and the moral conduct in which they guide their lives. In the memoir‚ The Women Warrior‚ by Maxine Hong Kingston‚ she depicts the struggle between culture and the discovery of individual beliefs and character through the stories and memories of her childhood. Influenced heavily by her mother Brave Orchid‚ Kingston is exposed to her Chinese
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