Ode to Joy

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    Book Talk: The Joy Luck Club “Now the woman was old. And she had a daughter who grew up speaking only English and swallowing more Coca-Cola than sorrow. For a long time now the woman had wanted to give her daughter the single swan feather and tell her, ‘This feather may look worthless, but it comes from afar and carries with it all my good intentions.’ And she waited, year after year, for the day she could tell her daughter this in perfect American English” (Tan 17). A Chinese woman migrates to…

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    Your culture can dictate what you value because of your surroundings. Your surroundings determine what you do, how you act, and how you think. Your surroundings make a huge impact on your life. Such as in Billy and Mike’s situation, where they want to play football because in their culture football is what boys their age do. Billy and Mike had a choice to play football rather than Jing Mei Woo and Waverly Jong. Jing Mei Woo never had that choice. Jing Mei Woo’s mother forced her to become a…

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    Long Winding Road

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    The lyrics of the Beatles’ ‘’Long and Winding Road’’ is the perfect metaphor for the chapter that ends the Joy Luck Club. This can be seen on two levels. The Joy Luck Club book begins with Suyuan Woo and, in a way, it ends with Suyuan Woo albeit in the person of the daughter Jing-Mei. The road followed by the members of the Joy Luck Club has taken them from China to America and now in the person of Jing-Mei the road has led them back again. On another level, the ‘’Long and Winding Road’’…

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    The Joy Luck Club Themes

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    In the book, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, a Chinese-American writer, there are various themes of significance. Such themes include Chinese vs. American traditions, Mother-daughter relationships, bad childhoods, bad marriages, child marriages, hope and women's rights. I am aware that each of these themes has their own importance, however, I believe that the theme of child marriage is most important. I intend to use the Ted-Ed talk of A warrior’s cry against child marriage by Memory Banda and Why…

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    In the novel “The Joy Luck Club” by Amy Tan, Tan depicts several different conflicts between four different Chinese mothers and their daughters. Each mother and daughter pair has their own separate stories and through these conflicts in each story, there are different life lessons that can be learned from. The first lesson comes from the mother An-mei Hsu, and her daughter Rose Hsu Jordan which teaches one to become confident and strong. The second lesson is from Jing-Mei Woo, also known as June…

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    As Wynonna Judd once said, “The mother daughter relationship is the most complex.” Jing-Mei and her mother’s relationship in the novel excerpt "Two Kinds," certainly represents this quote. Throughout the excerpt. Jing-Mei and her mother grow further and further apart as Jing-Mei’s perspective on cultural identity and the “American Dream” evolve, clashing with her mother’s opinion. Their contrasting opinions lead to several conflicts, each building off the previous, developing Amy Tan’s theme of…

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    In the first chapter of the Joy Luck Club, Jing-mei’s mother, has died recently. Jing-mei was asked by her father to take over her mother’s corner of the MahJong table in the Joy Luck Club. The Joy Luck Club was revived by Jing-mei’s mother, Syuan, in San Francisco, two years before Jing-mei was born. Jing-mei’s mother picked three other women to join the Joy Luck Club, An-mei, Lindo, and Ying-ying. She picked these three women because they had endured horrible things in China like she had.…

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    Amy Tan Two Kinds Analysis

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    the Chinese drew from to structure there own families and ways of parenting were The Odes which are the oldest existing collection of Chinese poetry and songs; they comprised works from 12th to 7th century BCE. It served as a template for many Chinese families in early tradition. The problem with The Book of Odes is that the poems and songs are often interpreted in different ways, but the importance of The Odes and other historical works of China are that they gave developing China a…

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    Amy Tan And Jing-Mei

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    Compare and Contrast Essay In The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, A few separate stories about mothers and daughter are told. One of the pairs is Jing-Mei and her mom, Suyuan, whom had a complicated relationship. Jing-Mei and her mom often did not see eye to eye and that caused some conflict between them. Likewise, often my mom and me have our disagreements. Our quarrels are frequent and can last from minutes to weeks. Jing Mei and Suyuan are contracting to my mom and me due to the high expectations…

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    In Amy Tan's book “The Joy Luck Club” mothers and daughters are very different but the same in many ways. All of the mothers were born in China and the daughters born in American. Lindo Jong and Waverly Jong are mother and daugher that are both Chinese and American. Lindo Jong was a strong, smart women. Her parents forced her into a horrible marriage. Lindo was treated as if she was a slave by her new mother-in-law. She had high self esteem and knew she could not be changed. After that she…

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