Afternoon ladies,
I will be hosting bookclub at my house this week, I'll have the fire going and a lovely spread to share.. Look forward to seeing you all. (Give me a call if you need directions 0407 341 651, I'll leave the gate open.)
Tamara x
Discussion questions are below.
1.What are your thoughts on the structure of The Joy Luck Club? It is not a traditional novel told by one narrator, but the stories are very intricately connected. How did that affect your reading experience? What were some of the differences you noticed in the way that you read this book as opposed to other novels or collections of stories?
2. Was there a particular story that has stayed with you the most? Why?
3. To what extent do these women experience acculturative stress? Does the initial stress endured by the first generation immigrant mothers create more or less conflict and challenge than that experienced by the second generation daughters?
(Prompts for discussion:
While Waverly was a prodigy and grew up to be successful in her career, Jing-mei (or “June” as she is called in America) has had more difficulty. Her parents also wished for her to be a “genius,” as if hard work alone could will it.
Jing-mei Woo’s chapter “Best Quality” (p. 221) highlights the difference between Waverly and June’s expression of familial culture.)
4. The goal of the mothers was to provide a better life for their children. Agree/Disagree. Is this singular to immigrant parents or universal to all parents?
5. To what extent do the second generation daughters experience gratitude for their circumstance, comparative to their mother’s experience.
(Prompt - Can a parent go too far with providing for their children, is this the case for any of the mothers with their daughters? Is this again singular to the immigrant parent or all parents?)
(Prompt - It is a common conception that young Asian children are more driven than their peers and more likely to excel because their parents demand more of them. However, it is Waverly’s mother who influences Waverly to quit chess, due to a hurtful argument.)
6. To what extent does The Joy Luck Club perpetuate or challenge stereotypes of Chinese culture.
7.How are men portrayed in the novel? Discuss.
8.How is marriage represented in the novel?
(Prompt - Each of the women faces difficult choices when it comes to marrying—whether it be Lindo Jong being forced into an early union with a man she loathes, Ying-Ying St. Clair starting life over with an American man after being abandoned by her first husband, or Rose Hsu Jordan, who is facing divorce from a man whose family never understood her.)
9. When Jing-mei’s aunties tell her about her sisters, they insist that she travel to China to see them, to tell them about their mother. They are taken aback when Jing-mei responds. “What will I say? What can I tell them about my mother? I don’t know anything. She was my mother” (p. 36). How well do any of the mothers and daughters know each other in this book? Kind Regards,
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