The Joy Luck Club
In Amy Tan’s novel, The Joy Luck Club, the author not only writes a story focusing and going into depth on the constant clash between the “low-context” American and “high-context” Chinese culture, but also touches on the subject of conflicts in the generation gap. Meaning, that because all of the characters (the four mothers and four daughters) grow up in different educational ways, leading all of them to have both different personalities and characteristics. Love and hope eventually reconciling the conflict. The novel also presents the conflicts with how men treat women throughout their lives. The idea is that the people in United States usually take for granted their roles as either a male or female. Each culture of countries within the US
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In China, though the women are expected to stay home, not work at a workforce (held exclusively for men). They are automatically assigned to the role of housewives and must stay at their respected homes to clean and raise the children. Women in america are allowed to receive education that then proceeds to prepare then for high paying jobs of a professional, while all of this is being allowed in the US, the women in China were obeying orders from their husbands and their culture. Chinese culture can be argued that it is based on Confucius, who taught about a more practical and ethical religion. His virtues included the basics: righteousness, propriety, integrity, filial piety towards parents, both living and dead. He also taught about obedience towards the father figure the husband, and the eldest son after the passing of the husband, The role of women in this case is one less important and submissive towards the one of men. In a family for example, the male figure maintains power over the family’s matters. In comparison, though, the people in the US do not have the same bearing on cultural tradition, each person in the US have their own opinions no matter how or what cultural tradition