Wednesday, February 13, 2019
East-West Values and the Mother-daughter Relationship in Amy Tans The
East-West Values and the Mother-daughter relationship in The rapture peril Club The dominant theme of The Joy Luck Club is the clash surrounded by Chinese, American cultures, and how it affects the relationship mingled with mothers and daughters. both of the mothers in the book were born and raised in China. All of their daughters were born and raised in the United States. Because of the differences in family traditions and set in the midst of the way the mothers had been raised in China and the way their daughters were growing up in America, there was bound to be a clash between the devil generations. Perhaps the most dramatic example of how East-West conflicting traditions and values affected a mother-daughter relationship was that of Suyuan Woo and her daughter, Jing-mei. When the book opens, Suyuan has been dead for two months. Her daughter, who prefers to call herself by the American name of June rather than her Chinese name, has been asked by her father to take her dead mothers place. She was to take Suyuans place in a club Suyuan started when she moved to America. June was to be the fourth member of this club, which was hosted at maven of the members homes each(prenominal) session and the group played mahjong and provided strength for each other in their transition to becoming Americanized. Over the course of the neighboring few months, through the conversations and stories told by her mothers old friends at the mahjong table, June learns a great deal about her mother, and, ultimately, about herself as well. One of the conflicts between East and West is clash between the hard work moral principle of Asian parents and the easier-going standards that Western parents have for their children. Watching a little Chinese girl playing the p... ...5. Heung, Marina. Daughter-Text/Mother-Text Matrilineage in Amy Tans The Joy Luck Club. womens liberationist Studies (Fall 1993) 597-616. Hagedorn, Jessica. Asian Women in Film No Joy, No Luck. S igns of Life in the USA. 2nd. ed. Ed. Sonia Maasik and Jack Solomon. New York Bedford, 1997. 306-14. Huntley, E. D. Amy Tan A Critical Companion. Westport Greenwood P, 1998. Ling, Amy. Between Worlds Women Writers of Chinese Ancestry. New York Pergamon, 1990. Shear, Walter. Generational differences and the diaspora in The Joy Luck Club. Women Writers. 34.3 (Spring 1993) 193 Tan, Amy. The Joy Luck Club. Vintage Contemporaries. New York A Division of Random House, Inc., 1991.. Wong, Sau-ling Cynthia. Reading Asian American Literature From Necessity to Extravagance. Princeton Princeton UP, 1993
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment