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- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- Essay Name : 818.txt
- Uploader : Lucia
- Email Address : pmyu@acs.ucalgary.ca
- Language : English
- Subject : Fictional Stories
- Title : A Pair of Ticket
- Grade : B+
- School System : 1st yr University
- Country : Canada
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments : This is quite good work. You've obviously devoted a lot of thought to this essay.
- Date : Mar18,1995
- Site found at : do not know yet, hope will find a lot of good stuff
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- The short story "A Pair of Tickets" is a component of a novel "The Joy Luck Club" by Amy
- Tan which focuses on a woman fulfilling the lifelong wish of her mother. The title symbolizes the
- discovery of the narrator's identity, and the soul of her emotional nature and feelings towards her
- mother. The setting in this story changes the soul of the narrator as she begins to discover things
- about herself and her two different cultures. As the story progresses, she begins to question things
- in her life, her identity, her mother's life, and the lives of her newly discovered twin sisters. She
- wants to fulfill her mother's wish of seeing the twin daughters once again. At the beginning of the
- story, she denies her Chinese culture, but through the trip to China, she matures and begins to realize
- her true self.
- When the narrator leaves the Hong Kong border to China, she feels the "familiar old pain"
- aching in her bones. This pain comes form her internal conflict between two different culture, her
- denial of being Chinese, and the missed opportunity for her to truly know her mother. According
- to Stanley L. Fong, " As Chinese become progressively removed from their ancestral culture and in
- greater contact with the dominant American culture, they will show an concurrent increase in their
- assimilation-orientation and in their internalization of American cultural norms" (39). As the
- narrator was born in America, goes to an American school, and makes friends with Caucasians, she
- starts to become part American. She wants to be more associated with her Caucasian friends, and
- because she is educated under an American culture, she thinks in an American way. She doesn't
- want to be an outsider in a foreign country, she wants to be associated with Americans in an
- American culture, she wants to be an American. In order to do so, she must deny her Chinese ways
- as taught by her parents.
- The characteristics of being a Chinese has embarrassed her enough. She does not want to
- be like her mother, " haggling with store owners, pecking her mouth with a toothpick in public,
- being colour-blind to the fact that lemon yellow and pale pink are not good combinations for winter
- clothes". She does not want to embarrass herself in public like that, does not want people to look
- down on her, and does not want to be stereotyped by Americans. Therefore, she tries to deny her
- Chinese identity.
- The narrator's trip to China symbolizes the fulfilment of her mother's wish to once again see
- her twin daughters. According to a character of Amy Tan, "Your mother was a very strong woman,
- a good mother. She loved you very much, more than her own life. And that's why you can
- understand why a mother like this could ever forget her other daughters. She knew they were alive,
- and before she died she wanted to find her daughters in China" (29). Her mother was very strong
- in her search for her daughters, but passed on before she could complete the task. The narrator goes
- to China to fulfill this task for her mother, as well as meet her family members she has never seen
- before. She wants to tell her twin sisters about the life of her mother, the mother they did not know
- about and the one who loves them so much. In fulfilling her mother's dream, it does not only help
- to make her feel better, but also gives relief to her mother's soul.
- In the trip to China, the narrator begins to understand the other side of her mother, and the
- strength of her soul. "...their mother-their mother-was coming, whereas my mother was dead." The
- mother in the narrator's eyes is just an unfashionable woman who only knows how to embarrass the
- narrator in public and express her ideas in fragile English. The narrator had never questioned her
- mother's life and the internal feelings her mother had or ever tried to look at her mother closely
- enough when she was still alive. But once her father told her about her mother's experience, she
- knows there is a lot more to her mother that she had ever realized. She starts to notice how
- important and strong her mother is , and wants to know more about her mother's past.
- The trip to China also symbolizes the discovery of Chinese blood in the narrator's identity.
- " Once you are born Chinese, you cannot help but feel and think Chinese". When she arrives in
- China, she starts to notice the similarity between her two cultures, and learns to accept the fact that
- she is Chinese. She notices that the crowds in the train station feels like getting on a bus in San
- Francisco, and starts enjoying the pushing too. In downtown Guangzhou, the highrises and the
- construction make her feel like she was in an American city, which is how she never expected it to
- feel before. She pays attention to the things around her, and tries to associate herself with the
- Chinese culture. She wants to learn more about her mother, and wants to be part Chinese. When she
- sees her twin sisters, she notices that they all look similar to their mother, and the fact that her
- mother and her sisters are completely Chinese. They were born in China, and they act and think as
- a Chinese. She finally realizes that there is Chinese blood flowing in her veins.
- Since the narrator's mother left her twin daughters on the way to Chungking, she had
- developed an illness caused by her depression of having to abandon them. In the Joy Luck Club,
- Amy Tan's narrator states that her father thinks the narrator's mother was killed by her own thoughts,
- but before her horrible thoughts could be eased, they exploded and killed her (5). The thought in her
- mother's mind may be her guilt of leaving her twin daughters and her hope of seeing them again. She
- blames herself for not being a good mother, she could not care for them the way that she feels a
- mother should have. She tried her best to find her daughters, but failed in the end. She wants to see
- them again, so that she can compensate for her failure to properly care for her daughters. She loves
- them very much and wants to be a responsible mother once again.
- The death of the narrator's mother, greatly affects the narrator in the story. Edith G. Neisser
- states that " Pressures from the outside and from within combine to produce this uncomfortable guilt
- once the mother died" (261). The narrator feels guilty and responsible for her mother's death. She
- thinks that she did not take care of her and understand her well enough when she was alive. She
- never admired and respected her before, and did not know how much her mother had suffered and
- how much her mother missed her twin daughters. She wants to ease her guilt by fulfilling her
- mother's wish, but she does not know how to face her twin sisters, because she thinks she is the only
- one who is responsible for their mother's death.
- In the story, the narrator mentions that all the cities in China have changed their spellings,
- except Shanghai, which is where her sisters live. This unchanged spelling of Shanghai is a symbol
- of her mother's dedication to her search for her daughters over these years. She travelled many
- different cities, and even wrote and asked her old schoolmate to look for her daughters. A part of
- her believes that finding them is impossible, but she still does not want to give up her hope, because
- of the bond she feels between them. It also symbolizes the change in the narrator after her mother's
- death. She learns more about her mother and accepts herself as being part of Chinese. She goes to
- Shanghai to see her sisters, because this is the only way she can fulfill her mother's wish and find
- her own identity. Therefore, Shanghai is a name which is very important to the narrator.
- The names of the characters are very significant to the story and show much about them.
- The name of the narrator's mother 'Suyuan', " The way she writes it in Chinese, means 'Long-
- Cherished Wish'.", according to the narrator's father. It symbolizes for her mother's continuous
- searching for her twin daughters and wish to be with them again. Her mother's name could also
- mean 'Long-Held Grudge' as sometimes used by her father when her mother would get upset. It
- shows another side of her mother that was quite often hidden, she held a grudge against herself for
- leaving her daughters on the side of the road and her irresponsibility of being their mother. 'Chwun
- Yu' and 'Chwun Hwa', the names of her twin sisters, mean 'Spring Rain' and 'Spring Flower', which
- show their order in birth and their starting of life when they are reunited with their mother again.
- The narrator's name 'Jing Mei', is also connected to her mother, which means 'Pure-Essential
- Younger Sister'. She is the only daughter that her mother could be with during this year, she is very
- essential to her mother in her life and she is the youngest sister of the twins. Her mother puts all her
- hope in the narrator, because she knows that she could not lose her child again.
- Throughout the trip to China, the narrator matures into an insightful woman with the heritage
- of two cultures. She finally understands what her mother meant by " Once you are born Chinese, you
- cannot help but feel and think Chinese.". During all of these years, the narrator has solved all the
- doubts about herself, her mother, and her sisters that she had. She knows that she is a part of
- Chinese which she can never deny again, because if has already been rooted in her veins.
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