Amy Tan: A Literary CompanionIn the mid-1980s, Amy Tan was a successful but unhappy corporate speechwriter. By the end of the decade, she was perched firmly atop the best-seller lists with The Joy Luck Club, with more popular novels to follow. Tan's work--once pigeonholed as ethnic literature--resonates with universal themes that cross cultural and ideological boundaries, and prove wildly successful with readers of all stripes. Tender, sincere, complex, honest and uncompromising in its portrayal of Chinese culture and its affect on women, Amy Tan's work earned her both praise and excoriation from critics, adoration from fans, and a place as one of America's most notable modern writers. This reference work introduces and summarizes Amy Tan's life, her body of literature, and her characters. The main text is comprised of entries covering characters, dates, historical figures and events, allusions, motifs and themes from her works. The entries combine critical insights with generous citations from primary and secondary sources. Each entry concludes with a selected bibliography. There is also a chronology of Tan's family history and her life. Appendices provide an overlapping timeline of historical and fictional events in Tan's work; a glossary of foreign terms found in her writing; and a list of related writing and research topics. An extensive bibliography and a comprehensive index accompany the text. |
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Amy commented, “She's always asking did you talk to your father today” (Ibid.). Despite Daisy's quirks, Tan grew up in a loving matrix of strong women. Her mother actually organized a female gathering like the Joy Luck Club.
Amy commented, “She's always asking did you talk to your father today” (Ibid.). Despite Daisy's quirks, Tan grew up in a loving matrix of strong women. Her mother actually organized a female gathering like the Joy Luck Club.
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March 22, 1989 Tan issued The Joy Luck Club, a cross-cultural feminist novel endorsed on the dust jacket by Louise Erdrich, Alice Ho›man, and Alice Walker. It immediately moved in two directions, as popular women's fiction and ethnic ...
March 22, 1989 Tan issued The Joy Luck Club, a cross-cultural feminist novel endorsed on the dust jacket by Louise Erdrich, Alice Ho›man, and Alice Walker. It immediately moved in two directions, as popular women's fiction and ethnic ...
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Tan gave credit to serendipity because The Joy Luck Club was published at a time when baby boomer mothers had daughters of their own to understand. The story “hit a nerve because women had begun to think about themselves and their ...
Tan gave credit to serendipity because The Joy Luck Club was published at a time when baby boomer mothers had daughters of their own to understand. The story “hit a nerve because women had begun to think about themselves and their ...
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After walling herself o› from interruptions, Amy produced an ambitious sequel to The Joy Luck Club in her framework novel The Kitchen God's Wife, a roman á clef that honors the author's parents and older brother Peter.
After walling herself o› from interruptions, Amy produced an ambitious sequel to The Joy Luck Club in her framework novel The Kitchen God's Wife, a roman á clef that honors the author's parents and older brother Peter.
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Tans Genealogy | 31 |
A Literary Companion | 33 |
Chronology of Historical and Fictional Events in Tans Works | 189 |
Foreign Terms in Tans Works | 200 |
Writing and Research Topics | 206 |
Bibliography | 213 |
Index | 225 |
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Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
Amerasian Amy Tan’s Asian American Bonesetter’s Daughter 200 Book Changmian child China Chinese Siamese Cat Ching dynasty Chwun Hwa Chwun Yu Clair Daisy Danru daugh death di›erent e›ort family’s father female Feminist Feng Shui feudal marriage Fish Cheeks Fu’s Further Reading genealogy ghost girl God’s Wife 99 Helen Hundred Secret Senses husband Japanese Jiang Sao-yen Jimmy Louie Joy Luck Club June Woo Kitchen God’s Wife Kunming Kuomintang Kwan Kwan’s Kwong Lena Lindo Jong Ling lives Luck Club 989 LuLing Liu LuLing’s mahjong MELUS mother mother’s Nelly Banner nese novel Nunumu o›ers Olivia Yee Laguni Opposite of Fate patriarchal Peanut Peking polygyny Precious Auntie Review San Francisco Secret Senses 995 Shanghai Sheng-mei Simon Bishop Sino-Japanese sister spirit story storytelling su›ers suicide Suyuan Woo Taiping Rebellion talk-story Tan’s fiction Tan’s The Joy Waverly Winnie Louie Winnie’s women writing Wu Tsing Ying-ying St York