Preview

The Accidental Asian: Notes of a Native Speaker Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
876 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Accidental Asian: Notes of a Native Speaker Summary
Pivka
October 20, 2011
English 101
P2

“Notes of a Native Speaker” Summary In 1998, Eric Liu wrote a book about his struggle with acculturation titled “The Accidental Asian”. A chapter within the book called “Notes of a Native Speaker” depicts an essay written by Liu which fully describes his struggles with race and how he overcame them. Eric Liu is an American born Taiwanese Asian. His parents immigrated to the United States before he was born and in so, gave him a mixed cultural background. He started becoming a writer after attending Yale University and graduating from Harvard Law School. In his “Notes of a Native Speaker” author Eric Liu argues that as he was “becoming white” he was achieving, learning the ways of the upper middle class and distancing himself from radicals of any hue. He has assimilated and in turn put himself into the profile of the “banana”. To begin, Liu opens his essay with a brief list of reasons as to why people can consider him to be white. One example from his list is that he eats “gourmet greens” (Liu 1). He goes on to state how he has reached a new status George in America. White people call him an “honorary white” (Liu 2), while fellow Asian people call him a “banana” (Liu 2), in that he is yellow (Asian) on the outside and white on the inside. Liu believes that assimilation has been “fixed in whiteness” (Liu 4). If anyone assimilates, then it is to be white. He adds that the assimilated are portrayed to be traitors to their own race; “He cannot gain the world without losing his soul” (Liu 6). After Liu’s extensive introduction he begins to inform the reader of his childhood and his parents. His parents did not strictly follow Chinese culture. Instead they clung to the relaxed American culture and in turn, did not force Chinese culture on Liu. Liu suggests that this is how he was able to assimilate so easily. While in fourth grade he made no distinctions between races. It made no difference if one friend was black and the



Cited: Liu, Eric. “Notes of a Native Speaker.” The Accidental Asian: Notes of a Native Speaker. Ed. Jon Karp. New York: Random House, 1998. 33-56. Print.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The point of this essay, “The Chinese in All of us” by Richard Rodriguez, was to show that America is one giant melting pot. That there is no such thing as an “American” culture. An American culture cannot exist as one central thing because there are so many cultures that mixed together to form what we have now. It’s a never ending cycle of growth as a country. The immigrants come to America and with them, they bring their ideas and customs. While they learn the customs we already have we, in turn, adopt some of theirs that we observe along the way.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The essay “Mother Tongue” describes a writer who grew up with a mother of Asian origin and the limitations created by her mother’s speech. The author, Amy Tan, defines her mother’s English as “broken” and that it created communication barriers. For example, when Tan’s mother would need to call her boss about work, she would rely on her daughter to make the phone call and use proper english. When Tan decided to go into English in college, it seemed foolish since she was more skilled in math and science. The author also mentions how not everyone’s speech is the same, but that is not a bad thing. Tan decided to start writing fiction, and write a book in a way her mother would comprehend. Though the writing was harshly critiqued, Tan knew she…

    • 227 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chang, I hoped to learn about the adversity and evolution of the people in this time period. I envisioned the book to be very informative about the various variables that created a divide between the Indian, African American, and White people and how these issues escalated. However, Chang’s work went far beyond that. His research and analysis of the information exceeded my expectations. Also, Chang’s delivery and writing style was a bit surprising to me. He wrote, The Color of the Land, in a way that created accessibility for a multitude of readers. His way of writing made this an easy read and created an embellishment of emotion, facts, and complete…

    • 627 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Have you ever been consider an outsider? Do you know what it feels like to have your ethnical background view as inferior or strange? In Amy tan’s “Fish Cheeks” and Mya Angelou’s “champion of the the world” it gives insight as to what it is like to be non- white in a dominantly white America. They show the differences and similarities of what sets them apart from dominant culture, and how the events that both portrayed effected that difference.…

    • 252 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The graphic novel American Born Chinese (2006), by Gene Luen Yang, is a very modern and influential piece of work that can be compared to the short indie film Two Lies (1990), directed and written by Pamela Tom, which had preceded the novel by 16 years. These two different forms of work, both utilizing their ability to teach the audience, are used as powerful venues for the topic of identity crisis among the Asian people in a majority European American world. In the film, we have Mei and her family who are all having some trouble adjusting to their lives in Southern California but more specifically we have Mei and her trouble to understand her mother 's cause and intent for having undergone double eye-lid surgery. In ABC, we have our protagonist, Jin, who is having trouble fitting into his new school in San Francisco since he is one of the very few Asian admitted to the school. Another time line in the novel is the story of the monkey king who does anything to get rid of the fact that he is a monkey in order to fit into society. The third is the story of Danny, a European American who has trouble and often becomes embarrassed with his hyperbolic Chinese cousin, Chin-Kee. This character is first introduced by saying "Harro Amellica!" while Jin 's father, carrying giant Chinese take out container says "I 'll put your luggage into your room, Chin-Kee" (48). All three of these time line show our characters having some sort of shame or embarrassment to the fact that their own image or background is different from those around them.…

    • 2458 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    To begin, the first interesting thing to be pointed out is the hangman's noose in the foreground behind the mob next to the dilapidated and burning African American “Colored” Orphanage. These images combined with the words “White Purity” and such racial slurs featured on the wall as “Rat-Eater” and “Barbarian” demonstrate the feelings of superiority that the dominant White citizens had about the Chinese. In the minds of many, White was the superior race and all other nationalities were inferior. According to the picture, the Chinese were to be seen no better than former African American slaves and were so low that they could justly be dealt with by a “bullet,” meaning murdered, as well as by “ballot,” meaning an immigration ban, which did eventually pass in 1882. In short, as Du Bois might put it, the “Chinese Question” bore striking similarities with the “Negro Problem.”…

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good 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

    According to the census of 1980 there were 3.5 million Asian Americans in the United States, about 1.5 percent of the total population. This was the first time in history that the Asian American population had amounted to as much as 1 percent of the total. Numerical incidence, however, does not necessarily indicate relative importance. The burden of this book, which treats systematically only the two pioneer Asian American groups, is that the immigration and acculturation of Asians has been much more significant in the history of the United States than their relative numbers would indicate. Examination of the unique experiences of Chinese and Japanese Americans gives a different and instructive perspective to more universal questions concerning…

    • 262 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mother Tongue Analysis

    • 1505 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The use of language determines how one identifies himself/herself and how others identify certain groups of people, but what happens whenever a certain group’s language doesn’t meet the “standards” of the usual American way of using language? Many problems arise. The authors, Amy Tan, who wrote “Mother Tongue”, Gloria Anzaldua, who wrote “How to Tame a Wild tongue”, and David Sedaris, who wrote “Me talk pretty one day”, all support a common argument that shows the linkage of identity and language. Because language is both part of identity and used to convey identity, ridiculing language use can be offensive to both individuals and their culture, which is the root of larger societal discrimination.…

    • 1505 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mother Tongue Summary

    • 441 Words
    • 2 Pages

    From Amy Tan’s “Mother Tongue”, it is evident that language has an effect on our lives. Language defines the type of person I am generally and it has had an effect on my choices as well as my lifestyle. Language has become my way of seeing life in a different perspective. In “Mother Tongue,” Amy Tan discusses the many ways in which the language that she was taught affected her life. I can definitely relate to Tan’s essay because I too come from a bilingual home. Like Amy Tan, I have intelligent immigrant parents and I am their main avenue of communication with people who don’t understand them. I believe the main idea of Tan’s “Mother Tongue” is to stress that just because someone cannot speak the English language to perfection does not in any way make him or her less intelligent than someone who is born in this country and understands and speaks English fluently. However, what makes us different is that it is rare to find two people who speak the exact same English. Although Tan and I both helped our parents and came from non-traditional homes, Tan came from a Chinese family while I come from a Nigerian family. We both had similar ideas about language playing a major role in our families, and it was also a big challenge for both of us while we were raised by immigrant parents who spoke “limited English”. Indeed, just as language can be the glue that binds individuals into a community, language is a double-edged sword that also bears the power to alienate an individual from a community.…

    • 441 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    SUMMARY FOR MOTHER TONGUE

    • 487 Words
    • 2 Pages

    an Asian American, speaks “Chinglish" all her life, which exerts a huge impact on Tan’s…

    • 487 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    mother tongue

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Citation: Amy Tan, “Mother Tongue”, The Norton Sampler, Ed. Thomas Cooley, New York, London, W. W. Norton & Company, 2013 by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 253-261, Print.…

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Zhan, L (n.d.). "Asian Voices: Asian and Asian ..." Google Books. Retrieved January 24, 2011, from http://books.google.com/books…

    • 1619 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    7.) Okabe, R .(1983). "Cultural Assumptions of East and West: Japan and the United States",…

    • 1624 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Based on Amy Tan’s “Mother Tongue”(Tan, 76-81) it is evident that language has an affect on our lives. Language defines the type of person I am generally and it has had an affect on my choices as well as my lifestyle. Language has become my way of seeing life in a different perspective. In Amy Tan’s “Mother Tongue”(Tan, 76) she discusses the way the language that she was taught affected her life in so many ways. I can definitely relate to Tan’s essay since I as well came from a bilingual home. Like her, I have intelligent immigrant parents and I am their main source of communication with people who don’t understand them. I believe the main idea of Tan’s “ Mother Tongue” is to stress that just because someone cannot speak the English language to perfection does not in any way make them less intelligent than someone who is born in this country who speaks fluently and understands English. However, what makes us different is that it is rare to find two people who speak the exact same English. Although Tan and I both helped our parents and came from non-traditional homes, Tan came from a Chinese family while I came from an Albanian family. We both had similar ideas about language being a major role in our families, and it was also a big challenge for both of us while we were raised by immigrant parents that spoke “limited English” (Tan, 78).…

    • 837 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays