Preview

Lost Sisters

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1031 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Lost Sisters
Stephanie Loftis
Professor Stacy Frakes
ENGL1213
23 October 2010
Who Am I Suppose to Be
When I first read the poem “Lost Sisters,” by Cathy Song, I was under the impression it was about a Chinese women who held great pride for her Chinese culture and who was frowning on the choice of her sister, who made the decision to move to America from China. After further investigation, I discovered that Song’s poem “Lost Sisters,” explains the story of a woman who is facing the difficult realities of being a Chinese immigrant. The poem describes how Song feels psychologically lost between two different cultures. She realizes she needs her Chinese culture as a part of her identity. In the poem “Lost Sister,” Cathy Song frequently uses the rhetorical appeals, pathos and ethos, to convince her readers of the struggles that are faced by being a Chinese immigrant.
In the first part of Cathy Song’s poem, she uses a combination of both rhetorical appeals, as she is explains the historical culture of Chinese women. Song uses ethos in the fact that she is an Asian American, who was born in Hawaii. Her father is Korean American and her mother is Chinese American. Her cultural background gives her the creditability to discuss the struggles that an immigrant may face. Song goes on to state, “In China, even the peasants named their daughters Jade- the stone that in the far fields could moisten the dry session, could make men move mountains,” (line 1-7) Song is emphasizing the meaning of an important Chinese culture. A jade is a stone that, to the Chinese, represents good fortune and health, as well as nobility and perfection. The Chinese hold a certain pride in shaping the desires and lives of Chinese girls in order to produce dutiful women. Women in China do not have much responsibility outside their households, and the Chinese would often use the practice of foot binding in order to limit their mobility. “In a society with a cult of female chastity, one primary purpose of



Cited: Song, Cathy. "Lost Sister." Merickel, P. "Reading Literature and Writing Arqument." Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall, 2008. 194-195. Print. Vento, Marie. "One Thousand Years of Chnese Footbinding." Academic Brooklyn. 7 March 1998. Web. 7 October 2010.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Introduction Anne Fadiman is an American journalist and widely recognized for writing about critical and sensitive issues of the society. In the famous work ' In the Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down', the author has focused on critically examining the intense collision between two different cultures, American and Hmong, by referring the case of Lia Lee (Fadiman, 1997), where Lee has been portrayed to be quite young and not physically well to speak for herself.…

    • 161 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    By telling a story of Lee’s mother, the author demonstrated that the native people looked down upon foreign people who had difficulties to live in a new circumstance and could not speak English well to express what they wanted and thought. With the discrimination from the native people, Lee’s family struggled a lot in this community. The audience is the people who did not show respect to the foreigners and did not help them overcome the difficulties.…

    • 287 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Book Review Wild Swans

    • 3284 Words
    • 14 Pages

    The book is a testimony to the strength and determination of her grandmother, her mother, and herself and their resourcefulness in recreating themselves during suffering, humiliation and disillusionment. She interweaves personal and historical stories fluently and the stories of these women and their families act as a lens through which you gain insight into the turbulent history of twentieth century China.…

    • 3284 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In The Struggle To Be An All-American Girl, Elizabeth Wong writes about her personal accounts of going to Chinese school to learn the language of her heritage and wanting to become All-American. Wong's purpose for writing this essay was to inform others of how she grew up and now she regrets her discussion. The genre of the essay is a personal essay because narrative and descriptive passages are used as well as first person. This essay's audience is other Chinese-American youth that want to become all-American or other that just want insight of her life. The social context of the essay is that there are others that are required to go to Chinese school and the cultural was the enlightenment regarding that not continuing to learn the language of her heritage. Wong's essay is a simple little passage telling about her life to others in the same situation.…

    • 511 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Each girl eventually recognizes how the older generation played a significant part in shaping their identities causing them to embrace their Chinese heritage. The short stories focus on the first American mothers and their American Chinese daughters.…

    • 490 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As its complex structure suggests, the book tries to organize the the stories of mother and daughter with the intention of reaching the same destination: the daughter's recovery of her cultural and ethnic identity as Chinese by overcoming the generational gap and the cultural differences between herself and her mother. The mother intend to hand over their "good intentions" and "usable past" in China to their daughter in America. Amy Tan, depicts the relationship between Jing-mei, a young Chinese-American girl, and her mother, a Chinese immigrant, her mother. She does not have something special things. However, her normal life has changed a little because of her mother.…

    • 827 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Arnold is warning Connie of his coming when he wags his finger at her and says "Gonna…

    • 545 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chinese immigrants in Canada were treated poorly during the depression. Life was hard, but acceptance and the family’s bond kept spirits high and helped them pull through the tough times. In The Jade Peony, the writer, Wayson Choy, tells three children’s perspectives of their family of Chinese immigrants dealing with death and acceptance during the depression. Everyone should read the Jade Peony because it develops important themes throughout the novel using the symbols and settings.…

    • 836 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Beginning in the late 19th century and continuing to the early 20th century, many Chinese families struggled to gain social, economic, and educational stature in both China and the United States. In the book, A Transnational History of a Chinese Family, by Haiming Liu, we learn about the Chang family rooted in Kaiping County, China, who unlike many typical Chinese families’ exemplified hard-work and strong cultural values allowing them to pursue an exceptional Chinese-American lifestyle. Even with immigration laws preventing Chinese laborers and citizens to enter unless maintaining merchant status, Yitang and Sam Chang managed to sponsor approximately 40 relatives to the states with their businesses in herbalist medicine and asparagus farming. Though the Chang’s encountered many of the hardships typical of Chinese families for the time, they relied on their outstanding work ethic so that their families would always be supported, receive the best possible education, and preserve family and kinship relationships to get them through the tough times and long periods of separation.…

    • 2293 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Like past immigrants who came from Germany, Ireland and other places around the world. Chinese people in America faced many challenges when migrating. They felt like outcasts. Some experiences for the Chinese were in racist encounters and the feeling the way that Nazli Kibra felt when she came to America. She had always thought of herself as an American when she thought of herself as “the American kid on the block,” (Source F) until she went to school and she felt outcast and that “Whites think they own the world and the rest of us are just here for them.” (Source F) They felt as though they did not fit in in America. For Kibra, the Americans that she noticed at her school were people who were “VERY white, very wealthy. These kids owned sports cars and went to Rio for the weekend.”…

    • 461 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    China Coin

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Not only does Leah learn to accept her mother, she gradually grows to accept her Chinese heritage and extended Chinese family. In traveling to China, Leah is confronted with the question of her true identity for the first time. However, as she becomes accepted by her extended Chinese family and learns more about their history, she comes to a place of accepting herself. She concludes, ‘No, you’re not Chinese, but you’re not not Chinese either. It doesn’t matter any more.’…

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Accidental Asian Analysis

    • 892 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Eric Liu grew up doubting his own identity. Early on he had trouble dealing with the problems of being an Asian-American. Growing up in a white suburban neighborhood Liu constantly felt out of place in. The suburbs that he grew up in caused him to struggle with his individuality. Who and what was he? How did he fit in the “big picture” as an American? He grew up with a family that allowed him to choose what he wanted to be never forcing any culture on him. Because of this freedom to choose, Eric in turn could not figure out for himself how he should act in a modern United States society as a minority. Liu’s group of collective essay’s deals with the entire process of what it means to be a white American. In giving a brief summary of “The Accidental Asian” and then critiquing the major theme of identity, a final analysis will be made on whether the overall essence of his work accurately deals with the modern Asian American struggle.…

    • 892 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Asian American Dreams

    • 1117 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Different from the other minorities groups, she assumed what Chinese Americans wished to be was not how to preserve their cultural identity, instead, they tried to explore by what they could be made a fully American. However, she was obviously dissatisfied with she was forever conceived as an “alien” even she was born in New Jersey.…

    • 1117 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    What does it feel like to be constantly left out due to race or culture? This is a normal occurrence for Eric Liu, a Chinese American speechwriter and journalist who has experienced many struggles with acculturation throughout his life. In the essay, “Notes of a Native Speaker,” Liu’s diction, figurative language, and personal experiences help him reveal his experiences with acculturation, as well as explain what race and culture mean to him.…

    • 578 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    One of the major ICC themes in the movie is the conflict between individualism and collectivism. Although not explicitly expressed, it has a strong impact on the whole course of the movie. The 4 immigrant Chinese mothers, having spent their childhood in Mainland China, embodied a strong collectivistic value. This is a dominant value in Asian culture, especially that of China. In such society, the priority of a group far exceeds that of an individual, and group-oriented interdependence is greatly emphasized. The negative experiences in China have, to a large extent, shaped the mindset of the 4 mothers. This is not the case for their daughters, who were born and raised in America, and embeded with the American values. They see themselves as independent individuals and their outlooks on lives greatly reflect the individualistic nature of their generation. This gave rise to a series of conflicts between them and their mothers.…

    • 1882 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays