joy luck club

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Straddling the generation gap
The Joy Luck Club was the first long-length novel of Amy Tan, and also a master
piece of hers. It tells a story of four women who immigrated into the United States on
the eve of the liberation of China and the contradiction between mothers and
daughters.
There’re eight main characters in the book, including four women who
experienced the pain and sorrow in their early days in China, and their daughters, who
were born in USA and grown up there. Different experience and circumstance of life
made an insurmountably huge gap between the two generations. However, they
finally manage to understand each other and find the true self of their own.
The fiercest conflict can be found between Waverly Jong and her mother Lindo.
It began with Waverly’s chess champion, she hated her mother use the matter to show
off everywhere, when she told her mother about it, the contradiction occurred. Lindo
misunderstood little girl’s embarrassment as a shame to be her daughter, she pretend
to be indifferent to Waverly’s everything, even when Waverly said she want to play
chess again. The misunderstanding hurt herself also her daughter, Waverly lost
confidence ever since, she always want to gain her mother’s acceptance, but Lindo
seemed never satisfied with her. Their conflict rise to an extreme when Lindo went to
the beauty parlor with Waverly, they finally come face to face and pour out all they
thought. This mother and daughter care each other, but hurt each other, the mother
want to take control of the daughter, the daughter want to prove herself to the mother.
They care too much about the other’s attitude to lose themselves. Finally, they
understood each and relieved. Also, Waverly escaped from her mother’s control and
find herself.
The contradiction between the mother and daughter comes from different
cultural background and experience, it didn’t end as tragedy because they finally share
their feeling with each other. Communication built a bridge between the two
generations and connected them together, that is what I think the author tried to
convey to the readers.