Amy Tan

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    Why Don T You Like Me The Way I Am?

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    not to respond to her attempt of finding her prodigy after seeing her mother being disappointed with her poor performance at her piano recital (Tan, 391). There is a moment where she has a shouting match between her and her mother when she cries out “Why don’t you like me the way I am? (…)” and it is implied that she doesn’t feel that her mother likes her (Tan, 389). It very well could be that she has a very deep fear in her subconscious that her mother will not like her unless she is a child…

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    written by Amy Tan, a daughter of Chinese immigrants. Based on her detailed past, I feel like she put pieces of her life in the novel. Just like the novel, Tan’s parents immigrated from China, in look for a better future in America. Amy Tan was raised as an American while her mother still hold inside of her the old Chinese culture. Another thing I felt she compared her life into the novel is what her mother expected her to do as she grew up. Like the mothers in The Joy Luck Club, Amy Tan parents…

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    but many times it is not seen the same way through the daughter's eyes. Amy Chua’s 2010 memoir Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mom and Amy Tan’s 1989 novel The Joy Luck Club recall their experiences of their own mother-daughter relationship. Amy Chua is narrating experiences she recalls having with her daughter learning to play the piano using a tone that is very tense, but she is only wanting the best for her daughter, Lulu. Amy Tan narrates experiences she, as the daughter, has with her mother trying…

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    Amy Tan style of writing came from culture impact of the third generation therefore Amy work was highly inspired by her American up bring and her chinese background. Most of Tan’s novel have one similar connection the importance of mother daughter relationship. The Joy Luck Club was made up into sixteen stories each about club members and American born daughters who immigrated from china. The mothers and daughters share stories of there lives about their families in china and the…

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    Each Individual informs the way one views others and the world. In the personal essay, “Us And Them” by David Sedaris, Sedaris claims that “The only place that seemed truly different was owned by a man named Mr. Tomkey, who did not believe in television.” (73) Mr. Tomkey was David's neighbor, who was viewed differently by David because of his personal beliefs of not wanting or needing a television. I suppose at that time it was or even still is strange for someone not to have a television in…

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    Amy Tan does a great job creating a cultural conflict between Jing-mei and her mom. Being from a different culture and living in a place where standards of society and cultural behaviors are different than what Jing-mei?s mom is used to, she wants to raise her daughter the way she would if they lived in China. Being born and raised in America by Chinese parents, changes the way Jing-mei thought of herself and her heritage while growing up. Her mother believed ?you could be anything you wanted in…

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    In Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club and in Bissinger's “Dreaming of Heroes” they both had a similar common theme, the children felt pressured to comply to their parents wishes or dreams for them. In these two stories Jing-Mei and Mike sometimes tried and sometimes they didn’t, their parents wanted them to live a better life than they did, and sometimes they didn’t understand. In Tan’s Joy Luck Club Jing-Mei’s expectations and her mother’s were very different. In a way Jing-Mei expected things…

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    be and Amy Tan’s mother is no exception to this. Being a Chinese immigrant, Mrs. Tan is a strong believer in the idea of the American Dream, where anyone can become anything they want to be in the land full of opportunities. Accepting the truth that her chance at the American Dream for herself is unlikely for her, she enforces the idea in the mind of her daughter Amy from a young age. Even though Mrs. Tan wants Amy to embody these ideas for Amy’s own good, Mrs. Tan expects too much from Amy at…

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    was arguing that Amy dialog of mother and daughter are too long. It was long conversation between them. There is no point to put so much stuff in the story. Less word would make story better and centralize. In my paper I will use argue of this article author that dialogs between mother and daughter is too many. The dialogs are not allowing all reader’s to follow story clearly. More concentrate on other thing instead mother and daughter conversation.…

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    Amy Tan’s The Bonesetter’s Daughter, is the story of a conflicted mothers and daughters who are discovering the family history and the lost relationships of their matrilineal line. Ignorant and blind to the past, Ruth’s mother, Liu Ling, is becoming forgetful, consequently Ruth sets out to rediscover her family. She acts upon her realisation to decide that the gap between her and her mother needs to be closed. Set between San Francisco in the late 20th century and Peking, China during World War…

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