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Introduction to Literature

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Title: Introduction to Literature


1
Introduction to Literature
  • Lesson Seven Amy tan
  • Family Relationships

Margarette Connor
2
Contents
  • Amy Tan biography
  • Two Kinds discussion

3
Amy Tan
  • Joy Luck Club
  • (???)
  • One of the most highly acclaimed writers of our
    day.
  • No one will deny the pleasure of Tan's seductive
    prose

4
Tan and Immigrant Family
  • Her parents escaped from Shanghai.
  • Her Main Topics Generational Conflicts, War
    between the sexes, assimilation.
  • Told by an Chinese-American narrator, who tries
    to find a balance between her Chinese culture and
    what the American society expects of her.
  • This happened to my Egyptian students, too. They
    had to find a balance between their Egyptian
    culture and Geneva society.
  • Asian-Americans face pressures also because they
    look different they are seen as ethnic others.

5
Early Life
  • Born February 19, 1952 in Oakland, California.
  • Grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, Her family
    lived in several communities in Northern
    California before settling in Santa Clara.

6
Parents
  • Father, John, an electrical engineer and Baptist
    minister from Beijing who fled the country for
    the US.
  • Mother, Daisy, who had been in an arranged
    marriage, was trying to flee with John.
  • Captured, raped and thrown into jail before she
    was able to escape.
  • Had to leave her daughters with their father.

7
Early success, early tragedy
  • 8 years old became a published author
  • wrote an essay on the public library that was
    published in a local paper.
  • Father and oldest brother both died of brain
    tumors within a year of each other when she was
    in high school.

8
Move to Switzerland
  • Mrs. Tan moved her two surviving children to
    Switzerland, where Amy finished high school,
    graduated from high school in Montreux,
    Switzerland.
  • During this period much friction between mother
    and daughter.
  • Amy Tan talks about how this was her very
    rebellious period

9
University
  • Originally attended Baptist college in Oregon
  • chosen by mother
  • Left and followed her boyfriend to San Jose City
    College (California)
  • Mother and daughter did not speak for six months
  • Further defied her mother by abandoning the
    pre-med course mother wanted in order to study
    English and linguistics.
  • Received her bachelor's and master's degrees in
    these fields at San Jose State University.

10
Marriage
  • 1974, married the boyfriend Louis DeMattei, to
    whom shes still married.
  • Now live in San Francisco and New York.

Tan and her husband
11
Earlier careers
  • Studied for a doctorate in linguistics, first at
    the U of California-Santa Cruz, later at
    Berkeley.
  • Left in 1976 without taking a degree
  • Worked with developmentally disabled people
  • With a partner, started a business writing firm,
    providing speeches for salesmen and executives
    for large corporations.

12
Professional writer
  • During the early 1980s became a full-time
    freelance writer, often using non-Chinese-sounding
    pseudonyms in her work.
  • Very successful, but soon found herself living
    the life of a workaholic

13
Relief in creative efforts
  • Studied jazz piano
  • hoping to channel the musical training forced on
    her by her parents in childhood into a more
    personal expression.
  • Also began to write fiction.

14
Immediate success
  • First story "Endgame," won her admission to the
    Squaw Valley writer's workshop taught by novelist
    Oakley Hall.
  • 1985 story appeared in FM, literary magazine, and
    was reprinted in Seventeen.
  • A literary agent was impressed enough with Tan's
    second story "Waiting Between the Trees," to take
    her on as a client and encouraged her to write an
    entire volume

15
Mother falls ill
  • Promised herself that if her mother recovered
    would take her to China to see the daughter who
    had been left behind almost forty years before.
  • Mrs. Tan regained her health
  • departed for China in 1987.
  • A revelation for Tan.
  • gave her a new perspective on her often-difficult
    relationship with her mother
  • inspired her to complete the book of stories she
    had promised her agent.

16
Relationship with mother improves
Tan has said that the trip to China and learning
about her mothers past have helped to heal their
relationship.
17
Joy Luck Club
  • The book that was promised to the agent was The
    Joy Luck Club.
  • The rest is history.

18
Major works
  • Joy Luck Club 1989, also made into a film
  • Kitchen Gods Wife 1991
  • The Hundred Secret Senses 1995
  • The Bonesetters Daughter 2001

19
Childrens works
  • The Moon Lady 1992
  • Sagwa,The Chinese Siamese Cat 1994

20
Magazine contributor
  • Essay "Mother Tongue" was published in The
    Threepenny Review and was selected for the 1991
    edition of Best American Essays.
  • Stories have appeared in
  • The Atlantic,
  • Grand Street,
  • Lear's,
  • McCall's, and others

21
Rock Bottom Remainders
  • Sings in the charity in a rock band, with other
    bestselling writers, including Stephen King, Carl
    Hiaasen and, until recently, Barbara Kingsolver.

Geek Chic The bands original line-up. Fuzzy
but funny.
22
"Nobody on the bus asks, 'Where do you get your
ideas?'"
  • Touring once a year as a leather-clad dominatrix
    belting out These Boots Are Made for Walking and
    Leader of the Pack satisfies a need,she
    says, to be a teenager again.

Tan with the band
23
With other Asian-American writers
  • As a writer, she is often grouped with other
    Asian-American writers including
  • Maxine Hong Kingston (The Woman Warrior)
  • Wakako Yamauchi (Songs My Mother Taught Me).

24
Tans contributions
  • She is so popular, bringing the Asian-American
    voice to the mainstream society.
  • In the Ethnic Roots Search trend Writing at a
    time when the people (e.g. second-or-third
    generation ethnics) in the States started to look
    for their roots.

25
Lots of two kinds Work together
  • Of daughters Those who are obedient and those
    who follow their own mind!
  • Jing-Mei and Waverly Jong, her rival at
    perfection
  • Chinese (obedience) vs. American (independence)
    and stereotypes of both
  • Living daughters, dead daughters
  • Pleading Child and Perfectly Contented

26
Our Sympathy for both Jingmei and her Mother
  • At first, we are sympathetic with Jingmei,
    because we all experience parental expectations
  • Then our sympathy shifts to the mother.
  • Towards the end, both win our sympathy.

27
Mothers American Dream
  • My mother believe you can be anything you want
    to be.
  • The American Dream of being a self-made man
    getting rich, but not a prodigy
  • Mothers background optimistic though she has
    experienced a lot of difficulties

28
Images for /Efforts on the daughter
  • Shirley Temple-- curly blonde hair with bangs and
    blue eyes can sing and dance
  • The hair episode hair permed and becomes kinky
    black fuss like that of a black? cut very short
    like Peter Pan, or called pixy cut
  • Fairy tale and religious images (ballerina,
    Christ child, Cinderella) the childs
    unrealistic expectation matched with that of the
    mothers.
  • The childs motivation wants the parents
    adoration and approval.

29
A List of Prodigy Talents
  • Knowing capitals of the States multiplying
    numbers in her head etc.
  • Funny
  • Its not the way to find a childs talent.

30
The Mothers Disappointment
  • Something in her starts to die
  • She looks at the mirror, realizes that she will
    always be ordinary, and then she starts to cry.
  • Angry face ? she senses the power on this face.
  • I wont be what Im not. ? She wont be what
    she is.

31
Battle of the Wills
  • The mother seems to give up
  • Ed Sullivan Show (Sunday Night shows stars and
    talent shows)
  • the mother tries very hard to get the TV set to
    work
  • a Chinese girl proudly modest on the show,
    which entrances the mother a Chinese Shirley
    Temple
  • Shes pretty good at least, shes been trying
    hard.
  • ? the piano lesson starts. ? Why dont you
    like me for what I am? ? Who asks you to be the
    genius? .. .
  • The mother may not know what prodigy means she
    just wants Jingmei to be the best she can be.

32
Mr. Chong
  • He was deaf, old and balding.
  • Mrs. Chong She had a peculiar smell, like a
    baby that had done something in its pants, and
    her fingers felt like a dead person's, like an
    old peach I once found in the back of the
    refrigerator its skin just slid off the flesh
    when I picked it up.
  • I just kept playing in rhythm.? play lazy.
    (Maybe I never gave myself a fair chance--an
    adult point of view.)

33
Immigrants Children
  • Wanting to fit in, they may feel ashamed of their
    parents who dont speak the language well.

34
Between the Two Mothers
  • Auntie Lindo "All day she Waverly play chess.
    All day I have no time do nothing but dust off
    her winnings."
  • Although she complains about her own daughter,
    actually what she does is hinting that Jingmei is
    not a talent.

35
Turning Point Talent Show
  • Jingmei daydreams but she does not work.
  • The part I liked to practice best was the fancy
    curtsy right foot out, touch the rose on the
    carpet with a pointed foot, sweep to the side,
    bend left leg, look up, and smile.
  • She is preoccupied by how pretty she is (foolish
    pride) but she is now worried about her
    performance (actually the sour notes staying
    with me all the way).

36
Aftermath
  • Old Chongs bravo
  • Auntie Lindos mild criticism the fathers
    humor
  • Waverlys rude remark "You aren't a genius like
    me.
  • The mother looks hurt.

37
Climax Rebellion
  • The daughter not your kind
  • The mother "Only two kinds of daughters," she
    shouted in Chinese. "Those who are obedient and
    those who follow their own mind! Only one kind of
    daughter can live in this house. Obedient
    daughter!"
  • "Then I wish I weren't your daughter, I wish you
    weren't my mother," I shouted.
  • ? Here our sympathy is with the mother.

38
Ending after a sequence of failures
  • The mother seems to have given up
  • The mothers gesture of making up Age 30, the
    mother offers to give her the piano. Jingmei
    starts to play the piano again.
  • "Pleading Child" was shorter but slower
    "Perfectly Contented" was longer but faster.
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