The American minorities depicted by my name are Usher Lev, Joy Lac Club, and Black Like Me. The value of conflict is a constant problem in society. In pluralist civilization, ethnic minorities became rulers of most people. In the American culture of the 20th century, there were many difficulties as a minority. "My name" is Asher Lev by Chaim Potok, and Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, two rifts of cultures are drawn as conflicts of today's minorities. Like me, the blacks of John Howard Griffin are investigating the hardship of a few people by gradually revealing ethnic minorities.
Emma of Jane Austen, Mark Twain's "Adventure of Huckleberry Finn" and Chime Potok's "My Name" are also depicted as facing society with a difficult journey of maturity. Personal tasks and youth conflict In the process, Emma, ​​Huckleberry, and Asher learned more about themselves and their social environment and somehow agreed to their own identity. Jane Austen draws Emma Woodhouse as a privileged young woman whose status and family structure are highly obsessive and whose experience is more enriched. . Her oversized self is a catalyst for her growth and maturity as she conquers the romantic lives of others. Through this type of intervention she began to grow and mature, gained my selfless thankfulness, eventually not only recognized the shortcomings of society but also recognized her own drawbacks. Potok's Astor Lev was also disposed of
Potok's 1985 novel Davita's Harp is his only book featuring women. In 1990, he announced a gift from Usher Lev, and the sequel of my name was Usher Lev. Potok wrote many dramas including his father's sin and abyss. In 1992, Potok completed another novel, and I was clay. And I talked about the brave fight of the family torn apart in the war. After his 1993 young adult literature "The Tree Here" there were two people, "The Current Sky" (1995) and "Zebra and Other Stories" (1998). Chaim Potok 's parents hinder him from writing and reading subjects other than Jews. He spent a lot of time reading the secular novels of public libraries. Potok lists James Joyce, Thomas Mann, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Ernest Hemingway, and S. Y. Agnon as major literary influences. Many of his novels were born in the city environment of New York where he grew up. Although not a Hashidic word, Potok was brought up in an extremely orthodox home.