Preview

Amy Tan Themes

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
887 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Amy Tan Themes
Essay Writing

Amy Tan’s beautifully written novel outlines what it is to be an immigrant in America and a daughter, woman, wife, lover, sister and friend. The novel shows four different stories each from different women that were born in China but forced to leave due to tragic occurrences, and their four daughters who were all born on the other side of the world, America. The novel explores one of the themes, the cultural divide between the two generations of women and their daughters and how national identity influences their lives.

The daughters of the four women are somewhat frustrated by their own mother's inability to leave behind their Chinese superstitious behavior and seeming reluctant to embrace the culture of their daughter's.
…show more content…
The mothers despair at the daughters distancing themselves from them. The author Amy Tan writes all eight characters' complex viewpoints both sympathetically and blunt but honest. One of the daughters Waverly Jong and her mother Lindo are an example of this theme. " My mother placed my first trophy next to a new plastic chess set... As she wipes each piece with a soft cloth, she said "Next time win more, lose less pieces". (p.98) This quote continues with Waverly explaining to her mother that it does not matter how many pieces you lose, but her mother has no knowledge of the game, she insists that Waverly should lose fewer pieces. This quote shows the ignorance in Waverly's mother and what lead to Waverly being upset with her mother. Waverly Jong experiences both external and internal conflicts. Waverly Jong defies her mother, Lindo. The reason why she hates her mother is because Waverly misunderstands her mother's pride in her achievements. When Waverly's mother, Lindo wants to watch Waverly during chess practice, , Waverly feels annoyed and invaded because Waverly wants chess to be her own achievement instead of her mothers, and she feels as though her mother is taking credit for what Waverly achieves. Her other conflict is whenever her mother goes shopping with her, her mother's bragging makes Waverly embarrassed which lead to a fight with her

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Munoz and Tan both describe the challenges that having immigrant parents can have in different ways. Both writers describe the effects of assimilation between two cultures. However, in her essay “Mother Tongue”, Amy Tan’s audience is the immigrants in the United States. Whereas, Manuel Munoz’s audience are all Americans, especially whites in his essay, “Leave Your Name at the Border”.…

    • 752 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Amy Tan has a contentious relationship with her mother perceived from her hostile tone. All mother-daughter relationships have troubles. In excerpts from Amy Chua’s memoir, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mom, and Amy Tan’s novel, The Joy Luck Club, mother-daughter relationships can be seen through diction, and tone. The annoyed tone in the situation between Amy Chua and her daughter shows a caring relationship while the hostile and hateful tone in Amy Tan’s excerpt shows a poor relationship with a hateful past.…

    • 407 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In "Rules of the Game", Amy Tan's narrator is Waverly Jong. Waverly is forced throughout the story to discover what game she is playing, and what rules she must follow in order to succeed in life. Waverly's chess playing becomes a metaphor for her struggle with her greatest opponent, her mother. At first Waverly's mother supported her but the mother-daughter relationship is strained by the end of the story. Waverly's mother gave her chang, (a small piece of red jade) (pg. 472), when she had her first tournament and told her this is for luck (pg. 472).…

    • 606 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the memoir the Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls her mother Rose Mary is characterized throughout the novel as an immature, neglectful, and very odd individual. While the family is in a real crunch for money Jeannette and Lauren eat a stick of butter because they're so hungry. When Rose Mary finds out she is furious and lists off reasons they needed to save the butter. When Jeannette tells her there's no bread to spread it on and no gas in the stove to make bread, Rose Mary’s defense is “We should have saved the margarine just in case the gas gets turned back on. Miracles do happen, you know”(Walls 69) This fight Rose Mary and Jeannette get into is senseless. Jeannette is about 6 and starving but her mother gets mad when she eats the butter, this leads the reader and Jeannette to think Rose Mary only wanted the butter for herself. Rose Mary wanting the butter for herself and not her children shows how selfish she is and how her children are not her top priority. Another instance where Rose Mary shows how she is selfish and indicates her children continuing to not be a top priority of hers is when she wants a piano. “Mom decided that we really needed a piano.” (Walls 52) Although her family is starving and her children have no the toys and raggedy old clothes, Rose Mary decides the family needs a piano, a selfish decision for her own benefits. When Rose Mary starts to teach Lori’s class at Battle Mountain, all the kids are acting up but rather than punish any of them she punishes Loir, “She had to punish someone, and she didn’t want to upset the other kids’ Lori said” (Walls 75) Although Lori says she wasn’t acting up her mother punishes her, which highlights her dishe other regard for her own children and cares more about what the other children think of her. Rose Mary cares what this class of elementary school kids think of her but she’s always telling her children not to care what others think of you. It’s also odd that she cares about these children’s opinion’s…

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Amy Tan Two Kinds Theme

    • 221 Words
    • 1 Page

    In the short story, “Two Kinds” by Amy Tan, the concept of The American Dream is illustrated through a mother and daughter relationship. The relationship is based on the mother wanting her daughter to accomplish The American Dream. The main character Jing-mei's mother looks at life in America as living The American Dream. Jing- mei states, “My mother believed you could be anything you wanted to be in America” (Tan 46). In her mother’s mind, she believed if you dedicated yourself to anything with enough hard work it was possible. This idea inspired her mother more than Jing-mei; her mother was always pushing her to be the best. Whether she was an actress or pianist there was always the idea that if enough time and effort were put into these…

    • 221 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jong is pretentious in front of Waverly. “‘Next time win more, lose less’.... ‘Better to lose, see if you really need’” (Pg. 4). Mrs. Jong acts like she knows more about chess than her daughter. Waverly had been studying chess meticulously, for a long time, and for her mother to act ignorant, made matters worse. Mrs. Jong’s struggle for control caused even more space between the two. Mrs. Jong feels like she is responsible for Waverly’s success, but Waverly has a different perspective. Waverly feels like her mother does not know much about the tactics and strategies of chess. Since their knowledge is on two different levels, it causes clash. Furthermore, “Her lips would be sealed tight, and after each move I made, a soft ‘Hmmmmph’ would escape from her nose” (Pg. 5). Mrs. Jong tries to manipulate her daughter to make her achieve her best, without letting Waverly think for herself. When Mrs. Jong shows her ego by acting like she knows what she is doing she is creating a conflict in the relationship and distancing their relationship..…

    • 629 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Mona and the Promised Land

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages

    It has often been said that coming to America is the start of a new life for many immigrant families. The novels Mona and the Promised Land by Gish Jen, and Hunger of Memory by Richard Rodriguez, it is said that “American means being whatever you want” (Jen 49). Mona and Rodriguez both strive to reach that “American dream.” They take the initiative throughout the novel and seek what they want to become. However, the novels show that in order for Mona and Rodriguez to become what they want, they have to make sacrifices. From losing their culture to losing their strong relationships with their parents, Mona and Rodriguez will have to endure consequences of their decision to become what they want to be.…

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    It often surprises me how different individuals from different cultures and backgrounds all come together in one country and share many experiences. Individuals like Amy Tan who was born among Chinese immigrants, John Cheever from Massachusetts and Louise Erdrich who comes from a Chippewa Indian and German background and was born in Minnesota. A vast variety of origins and they all come to have several good or bad things in common in their work. Hardships of immigration is stated or implied in these pieces as well as parent-child relationship. Nearly all of them carry a sense of determination of different levels and stories of this kind not unlike the ones examined in this piece have a blend, colorless and depressing tone.…

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Why I Live at the P.O

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The character in this story, Sister, seems to be in a way jealous and a little selfish, but with good reason, she has a sister, Stella-rondo, who has always been everyone's favorite and everyone would believe everything she said, from her saying that Sister was "one-sided to her,( Stella-Rondos ) "adopted" child. Sister has every reason to not like Stella-Rondo. Everyone else in the house seems to think that Sister is indeed very jealous of Stella-Rondo, and Sister can not even defend herself because that would have just verified everyone's point. Although it is a little comedic, the whole story shows bits and pieces of anyone's everyday lives. Jealousy, stubbornness, spitefulness, and sibling rivalry are the main things implicated in this story.…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Asian Americans suffered the most while living in the America as immigrants, illegal or not. Because of this, the Asian Americans families faced many difficulties such as grief and acceptance. The families sacrificed a lot to be in America and all they received are troubles. Both the novels, Bone by Fae Myenne Ng and When the Emperor was Divine by Julie Otsuka, shared the same difficulties as the families struggled to overcome the differences to achieve the American Dream that are hard for Asian Americans.…

    • 85 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mother Tongue , Amy Tan

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages

    After reading the strongly written “Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan, it shows a great deal of strength from the Asian American culture. Throughout the reading it showed how hard it was and still is for Asian Americans to work through the difficulties of the English language. The essay talked first about the different languages of English that this young lady learned and used through her life. The second part was about the difficulties that she had through school because English wasn’t here strongest subject and lastly the problems that arose for her because of the way her mother spoke English. Having English as a second language for Amy was difficult at times, but through her faults and triumphs she overcame and succeeded when no one thought she could.…

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mei Ling is the eldest of four children. She has a sister and twin brothers. At the age of nine years old, her parents divorced. Mei Ling and her siblings moved to different home with her mother. Her father moved back to Malaysia where he is originally from. Her mother became “depressed” and withdraw emotionally from the children. Her mother remarried some years later. Mei Ling felt sad not seeing her father. She felt lonely in new home. She had to take care of her younger siblings and worried over her mother’s condition.…

    • 2559 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Joy Luck Club

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In this essay, I seek to analyze the miscommunication between a mother and a daughter from Amy Tan’s book, “The Joy Luck Club.” In the three stories I will be using taken from the collective works, the two primary characters are Lindo Jong, the mother, and her daughter, Waverly Jong. Lindo is a traditional Chinese mother attempting to live in a Chinese community but playing by American rules. She is extremely cynical and demands respect and constant obedience from her daughter Waverly as well as her two sons. Waverly is more American in mindset, seeing her community and family as a member and yet aware of the differences between her lifestyle and the average American one. These two characters’ personalities and perspectives on life conflict in each story, bringing them to strategize and change as people as they continue to interact over time.…

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Amy Tan

    • 699 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Have you ever been utterly embarrassed by your family? In the memoir “Fish Cheeks” by Amy Tan, Amy, a Chinese-American girl is embarrassed by her family’s Chinese customs at Christmas Eve dinner. The reason she is so humiliated is because her family invited the minister and his family over for dinner, and Amy, who has a crush on their son Robert, is acutely aware of the cultural differences between the two families. In spite of the fact that the meal was a horrifying event for young Amy, she eventually learns to appreciate her mother’s advice to be proud of her Chinese culture.…

    • 699 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Mother Daughter Bond

    • 3563 Words
    • 15 Pages

    Many of the mothers in Amy Tan’s novels are having difficult times balancing the people they really are and the face they choose to show. Many of them feel that they have to hide their different Chinese heritage and ugly pasts in order to find acceptance. Lindo found it hard to keep her Chinese face that she loved in America, and before she even arrived, she had to hide her true self (Tan, Luck Club 258). When the mothers try to conceal who they truly are and try to fit in, it is sometimes for their daughters’ benefit. Ying- Ying who tried so hard to please, impress, and not embarrass her daughter, that she has been quiet for so long that she blends into the…

    • 3563 Words
    • 15 Pages
    Better Essays