At Joy Luck Club, culture plays an important role in the conflict between mother and daughter. Tan uses her past family's experience to stimulate her fictional novel and the work of discovering the real identity based on maintaining the Chinese tradition. Tan uses mother's storybook and multiple perspectives to show how Chinese immigrant girls are immersed in American culture.
Amy Tan 's' The Joy Luck Club 'by Amy Tan' s "The Joy Luck Club" is a collection of short stories about the relationship between a mother born in China and her daughter. The story titled "Four Directions" relates to a woman named Waverly Jong. The story is to tell her that Waverly is married to an American man named Richard. - Amy Tan's "Mother's Tongue" Amy Tan's article "Native Mother" is how hard it is when people are raised by Tan's mother who said parents of "limited English" (36) brought up It aims to show. It may lead people to be badly judged by others. As Tan 's primary caregiver, her mother is an important part of her childhood, and she has a great influence on Tan' s composition style.
Parents of Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club always want the best kids, regardless of culture or ethnicity. At The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan and Itabari Njeri 's "Life With Father" parents expressed their parents' ways to their daughters. Like Waverly, June, Itabari, children show different responses to parents' methods, but they still have a common indignation toward their parents. - Amy Tan of Joy Luck Club as a whole inserts various conflicts between mother and daughter. Most of these relationships are already extremely fragile, alienated through heritage, history, and expectation. These differences bring about a recurrence of conflict between the two specific mothers and daughter's bonds. There is a first relationship between Weber region and her mother, Lind.
Amy Tan's Joy Luck Club explains the story of the relationship between the four Chinese mothers and the four Chinese daughters and their mothers and daughters. Four mothers gathered at the church in San Francisco in 1949. Suyuan Woo, the founder of Joy Luck Club, persuaded other mothers Xu Meimei, Lindo Jong and Yingying St. Clair to join this club. The club meet at the mother's house every week, where they eat, play mah-jong and boast about her daughter. A Chinese daughter tells us