and space distance. But Amy Tan‚ a Chinese American author illustrates the generation gap in a different way. In her novel‚ The Joy Luck Club‚ Amy Tan described the generation gap between four-immigrant American Chinese mother and their American born daughter‚ which is cause by the bi-culture difference‚ lack of communication and the different view of America‚ in order to illustrate the culture differences and hardship in a immigrant family in America. In the novel‚ Tan illustrates the generation
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“Family like branches on a tree‚ we all grow in different directions‚ but our roots keep us all together”. This mean that we all become diverse individuals yet what keeps all of us united as one is our genealogy. In the story A Pair of Tickets by Amy Tan we come across a character named June May who is on her mid thirties and embarks on a mission to China to meet her lost twin sisters to notified them of their mother’s death and also to make her not existing mother “Long-Cherished Wish” come alive
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In Amy Tan’s short story “Two Kinds”‚ Jing- mei‚ is guided throughout her life by culture. “My mother believed you could be anything you wanted to be in America” (Tan 21) Jing-mei’s mother wanted her to be the “Chinese Shirley Temple‚” but that is not what she wanted. Pleased to make her mother happy‚ she does as she is told to do. “I found some old Chinese silk dresses…i rubbed the old silk against my skin and then wrapped them in tissue and decided to take them home with me” (Tan 29). Obviously
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Max Dayley Mr. McHenry English 12 9/29/06 Amy Tan The Author of the book The Joy Luck Club is written by American author Amy Tan. Born in China on February 19‚ 1952 in Oakland‚ California to her parents John and Daisy. She was a part of the first generation of Asian Americans. Along with The Joy Luck Club she also wrote‚ The Kitchen God’s Wife‚ The Hundred Secret Senses‚ and The Bonesetter’s Daughter. The latest book written by Amy Tan is Saving Fish From Drowning. She also has written two children
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Sonam Shankar ID# 1723801 English 103-276 January 17‚ 2011-01-17 Two Kinds Amy Tan In the short story “Two Kinds”‚ Amy Tan uses the narrator’s point of view to share a mother’s attempt to control her daughter’s dreams and ambitions. Tan`s short story is an example of how differing personalities cause struggles between a parent and child. Children often fall victim to a parent trying too hard or expectations being too high‚ and in the case of "Two Kinds‚" we see Jing Mei’s mother trying to
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Amy Tan From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Personal life Amy Tan was born in Oakland‚ California to Chinese immigrants John Tan‚ an electrical engineer and Baptist minister‚ and Daisy‚ who was forced to leave her three daughters from a previous marriage behind in Shanghai. This incident provided the basis for Tan’s first novel‚ 1989 New York Times bestseller The Joy Luck Club. Amy is the middle child and only daughter among Daisy and John Tan’s three children. In the late 1960s Amy’s sixteen-year-old
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Summary of “Mother Tongue” In the book‚ “Mother Tongue”‚ Amy Tan asserts that language is a tool of communication. Tan herself speak two kinds of English‚ standard English and broken English. She realizes that she always speak in perfect English‚ the standard English‚ when she gives a speech‚ when she is giving a speech which her mother attends. However‚ when she talks to her mother‚ she changes her language into a limited English‚ broken English‚ without any transfer. This is because the language
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However‚ what makes us different is that it is rare to find two people that speak the exact same English. This is the argument Amy Tan makes in her story “Mother Tongue.” She shares her personal story of the English she speaks‚ and how much the people you are around can change the way you converse. Born in the United States to immigrant parents from China‚ Amy Tan failed her mother’s expectations that she become a doctor and concert pianist. She settled for writing fiction. Her novels are
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The passage “Fish Cheeks” written by Amy Tan is a short based on Amy Tan’s personal experience as a typical Asian girl growing up in an American culture. Amy’s only wishes that her and her family were more American so that she could fit the modern American world. She has a huge crush on a boy named Robert‚ who is the minister’s son and she gets terrified when she finds out Roberts family gets invited her to a traditional Chinese Christmas Eve dinner. Just when Amy thought it couldn’t get any worse‚
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Cited: "The Sisters." Shmoop. Web. 04 Mar. 2013. http://www.shmoop.com/barn-burning/the-sisters.html "Two Kinds by AMYÂ TAN." NovelSneak. Web. 04 Mar. 2013. http://novelsneak.wordpress.com/2009/12/16/two-kinds-by-amy-tan Colonel (Sarty) Sartoris Snopes." Shmoop. Web. 04 Mar. 2013. http://www.shmoop.com/barn- burning/colonel-sarty-sartoris-snopes.html "Brief Explanations on Two Kinds Characters." - Essay. Web. 04 Mar.
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