The Transformation of the Mother-Daughter Relationship in Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club and The Bonesetter’s Daughter
Abstract
The mother/daughter bond is the central subject of Amy Tan’s two powerful books, The Joy
Luck Club and The Bonesetter’s Daughter. Tensions that arise in the novels between a Chinese
mother and her Chinese-American daughter are often described by the critics as being the
result of two important factors. One is based on the misunderstandings caused by the
generational gap, while the other comes from the cultural gap. For a Chinese-born mother the
American reality instigates various confusions, as she still views her life with the eyes of her
traditional Chinese upbringing. On the other hand, her daughter lacks any profound
knowledge about her Chinese ethnicity, which makes her unable to recognize the influences of
her mother’s Chinese past over their relationship. But in her novels Tan portrays also the
relationship between the Chinese immigrant mother and her mother in China. Their
relationship, which grew up exclusively on the grounds of the Chinese culture, is
characterized by empathy and appreciation. In this paper I am going to discuss the change
that occurred to the mother-daughter relationship after it has been replanted into a different
cultural context. The line of argument will reveal in what ways the mother-daughter
relationship underwent a significant transformation.
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