Saturday, July 20, 2019
Mother Daughter Relationships - Mothers and Daughters in Amy Tans The Joy Luck Club :: Joy Luck Club Essays
      Mothers and Daughters in The Joy Luck Club                        Although mothers and daughters are genetically related, sometimes they seem  like complete strangers. When immigrants raise their children in America, there  is a great concern for these parents that American culture will negatively  affect their children. In the novel, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, four mothers  try to instill their Asian culture into their daughters' lifestyle; however,  these daughters rebel against them, due to their desire to assimilate themselves  into American culture.            Early in the novel, the Joy Luck Club members discuss the different types of  mah jong; it is then that Jing Mei realizes how oppositely she and her mother  spoke to one another. While these women are explaining the differences in  Chinese and Jewish mah jong, Jing Mei plays back the conversations that she and  her mother used to have regarding the same topic. During their talks, her mother  indirectly attempted to have her daughter keep her Asian culture a part of her  daily lifestyle. One way was through Suayan's snappish tone, used when  describing the lesser style, Jewish mah jong, with no logical explanation. Jing  Mei assumed that this negativity was simply because of its ethnicity being  unlike the Chinese way. Despite her mother's wishes, Jing Mei played Jewish mah  jong with her friend's (22). Another roundabout manner Suayan avidly sought to  keep the Asian tradition in her daughter's lifestyle was Suayan's refusal to  speak to her daughter in English. Jing Mei's rebellion    was similarly apparent  when she continued to speak in a subdued tone in English while her mother spoke  in Chinese.            Later on in the novel, Waverly and her mother, Lindo, are at odds with each  other over a simple haircut. Lindo is annoyed by Waverly's haircut because it  does not resemble a traditional Asian hairstyle; rather it looks "chopped off,"  and that Waverly should "ask for {her} money back (182). Waverly, on the other  hand, loves it because it looks fashionably American (182). Knowing it would  infuriate her mother, Waverly rebels regardless because it was more important to  look "hip" than to please her mother.            Towards the end of the novel, Waverly and her mother conflict over whether  Waverly, as a young woman, will be accepted in China since she has been able to  "walk out the door by herself and go to school," she has chosen not to follow  her mother's Chinese ways (289).  					    
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